Authors
Michael A Lefsky, David J Harding, Michael Keller, Warren B Cohen, Claudia C Carabajal, Fernando Del Bom Espirito‐Santo, Maria O Hunter, Raimundo de Oliveira Jr
Publication date
2005/11
Journal
Geophysical research letters
Volume
32
Issue
22
Description
Exchange of carbon between forests and the atmosphere is a vital component of the global carbon cycle. Satellite laser altimetry has a unique capability for estimating forest canopy height, which has a direct and increasingly well understood relationship to aboveground carbon storage. While the Geoscience Laser Altimeter System (GLAS) onboard the Ice, Cloud and land Elevation Satellite (ICESat) has collected an unparalleled dataset of lidar waveforms over terrestrial targets, processing of ICESat data to estimate forest height is complicated by the pulse broadening associated with large‐footprint, waveform‐sampling lidar. We combined ICESat waveforms and ancillary topography from the Shuttle Radar Topography Mission to estimate maximum forest height in three ecosystems; tropical broadleaf forests in Brazil, temperate broadleaf forests in Tennessee, and temperate needleleaf forests in Oregon. Final …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
MA Lefsky, DJ Harding, M Keller, WB Cohen… - Geophysical research letters, 2005