*
 

iForest - Biogeosciences and Forestry

*

A simplified methodology for the correction of Leaf Area Index (LAI) measurements obtained by ceptometer with reference to Pinus Portuguese forests

Domingos Lopes (1)   , Leónia Nunes (2), Nigel Walford (3), José Aranha (1), Carlos Jr Sette (4), Helder Viana (2), Carmen Hernandez (5)

iForest - Biogeosciences and Forestry, Volume 7, Issue 3, Pages 186-192 (2014)
doi: https://doi.org/10.3832/ifor0096-007
Published: Feb 17, 2014 - Copyright © 2014 SISEF

Technical Advances


Forest leaf area index (LAI) is an important structural parameter controlling many biological and physiological processes associated with vegetation. A wide array of methods for its estimation has been proposed, including those based on the sunfleck ceptometer, a ground-based easy-to-use device taking non-destructive LAI measures. However, use of ceptometer in pine stands leads to the underestimation of LAI due to foliage clumping of this species. Previous studies have proposed a correction of biased LAI estimates based on the multiplication by a constant factor. In this study, a new method for obtaining a correction factor is proposed by considering the bias (the difference between the ceptometer measure and the reference LAI) as a function of the stand structural variables, namely the basal area. LAI data were collected from 102 sampling plots (age range: 14-74) established in Pinus pinaster forests all across nor­thern Portugal. Data from 82 sampling plots were used for the adjustment of the LAI ceptometer correction model, while the remaining 20 plots were used for the model validation. The observed LAI ranged from 0.34 to 6.4 as expected from the large heterogeneity of the sampled pine stands. Significant diffe­rences were detected between LAI values estimated by ceptometers and LAI reference values. Different correction methods have been compared for their accuracy in predicting LAI reference values. Based on the results of the stati­stical analysis carried out, the new proposed LAI correction outperformed all the other methods proposed so far. The new approach for bias reduction proposed here has the advantage of being easily applied since the basal area is almost always available from forest inventory or can be inferred from remote sensing surveys. However, the bias correction model obtained is site-specific, being dependent on stand species composition, soil fertility, site aspect, etc. and should therefore be applied only in the study area. Nonetheless, the development of a correction methodology based on an allometric approach has proved to greatly improve LAI ceptometer estimations.

  Keywords


Leaf Area Index, Ceptometer, Correction, Pinus pinaster

Authors’ address

(1)
Domingos Lopes
José Aranha
Departamento de Ciências Florestais e Arquitetura Paisagista, Universidade de Trás-os-Montes e Alto Douro, Quinta de Prados, 5000-801 Vila Real (Portugal)
(2)
Leónia Nunes
Helder Viana
Escola Superior Agrária de Viseu, Quinta da Alagoa - Estrada de Nelas, Ranhados, 3500-606 Viseu (Portugal)
(3)
Nigel Walford
School of Earth Sciences and Geography, Kingston University, Penrhyn Road, KT1 2EE Kingston upon Thames (UK)
(4)
Carlos Jr Sette
Agronomy School, UFG, Campus Samambaia - Rodovia Goi’nia / Nova Veneza Km 0 - Caixa Postal 131, CEP 74690-900, Goi’nia, GO (Brazil)
(5)
Carmen Hernandez
Facultad de Informatica UPV/EHU, Paseo de Manuel Lardizabal 1, 20018 Donostia-San Sebastián (Spain)
(6)
CITAB - Centro de Investigação e de Tecnologias Agro-Ambientais e Biológicas, UTAD, Apartado 1013, 5000-801 Vila Real (Portugal)

Corresponding author

 
Domingos Lopes
dlopes@utad.pt

Citation

Lopes D, Nunes L, Walford N, Aranha J, Sette CJ, Viana H, Hernandez C (2014). A simplified methodology for the correction of Leaf Area Index (LAI) measurements obtained by ceptometer with reference to Pinus Portuguese forests. iForest 7: 186-192. - doi: 10.3832/ifor0096-007

Academic Editor

Roberto Tognetti

Paper history

Received: May 17, 2011
Accepted: Oct 08, 2013

First online: Feb 17, 2014
Publication Date: Jun 02, 2014
Publication Time: 4.40 months

Breakdown by View Type

(Waiting for server response...)

Article Usage

Total Article Views: 28539
(from publication date up to now)

Breakdown by View Type
HTML Page Views: 22203
Abstract Page Views: 951
PDF Downloads: 4111
Citation/Reference Downloads: 33
XML Downloads: 1241

Web Metrics
Days since publication: 3714
Overall contacts: 28539
Avg. contacts per week: 53.79

Article Citations

Article citations are based on data periodically collected from the Clarivate Web of Science web site
(last update: Nov 2020)

Total number of cites (since 2014): 9
Average cites per year: 1.29

 

Publication Metrics

by Dimensions ©

Articles citing this article

List of the papers citing this article based on CrossRef Cited-by.

 
(1)
Bréda NJJ (2003)
Ground based measurements of leaf area index: a review of methods, instruments and current controversies. Journal of Experimental Botany 54 (392): 2403-2417.
CrossRef | Gscholar
(2)
Chen JM, Black TA (1992)
Defining leaf area index of non-flat leaves. Plant Cell and Environment 15: 421-429.
CrossRef | Gscholar
(3)
Chen JM, Cihlar J (1995)
Plant canopy gap-size analysis theory for improving optical measurements of leaf-area index. Applied Optics 34 (27): 6211-6222.
CrossRef | Gscholar
(4)
Chen JM, Cihlar J (1996)
Retrieving leaf area index of boreal conifer forests using Landsat TM images. Remote Sensing of Environment 55: 153-162.
CrossRef | Gscholar
(5)
Chianucci F, Cutini A (2013)
Estimation of canopy properties in deciduous forests with digital hemispherical and cover photography. Agricultural and Forest Meteorology 168: 130-139.
CrossRef | Gscholar
(6)
Deblonde G, Penner M, Royer A (1994)
Measuring leaf area index with the Li-Cor LAAI-200 in pine stands. Ecology 75 (5): 1507-1511.
CrossRef | Gscholar
(7)
Decagon Devices (1989)
Sunfleck Ceptometer - User Manual. Delta-T Devices LTD, Cambridge, UK, pp. 77.
Gscholar
(8)
Demarez V, Duthoit S, Baret F, Weiss M, Dedieu G (2008)
Estimation of leaf area and clumping indexes of crops with hemispherical photographs. Agricultural and Forest Meteorology 148: 644-655.
CrossRef | Gscholar
(9)
Dufrêne E, Bréda N (1995)
Estimation of deciduous forest leaf area index using direct and indirect methods. Oecologia 104: 156-162.
CrossRef | Gscholar
(10)
Eklundh L, Harrie L, Kuusk A (2001)
Investigating relationships between Landsat ETM+ sensor data and leaf area index in a boreal conifer forest. Remote Sensing of Environment 78: 239-251.
CrossRef | Gscholar
(11)
Eriksson HM, Eklundh L, Kuusk A, Nilson T (2006)
Impact of understory vegetation on forest canopy reflectance and remotely sensed LAI estimates. Remote Sensing of Environment 103: 408-418.
CrossRef | Gscholar
(12)
España ML, Baret F, Weiss M (2008)
Slope correction for LAI estimation from gap fraction measurements. Agricultural and Forest Meteorology 148: 1553-1562.
CrossRef | Gscholar
(13)
Gower ST, Norman J (1991)
Rapid estimation of leaf area index in conifer and broad-leaf plantations. Ecology 72 (5): 1896-1900.
CrossRef | Gscholar
(14)
Gregoire TG, Valentine HT, Furnival GM (1995)
Sampling methods to estimate foliage and other characteristics of individual trees. Ecology 76: 1181-1194.
CrossRef | Gscholar
(15)
Hernández C, Nunes L, Lopes D, Graña M (2014)
Data fusion for high spatial resolution LAI estimation. Information Fusion 16: 59-67.
CrossRef | Gscholar
(16)
Jonckheere I, Fleck S, Nackaerts K, Muys B, Coppin P, Weiss M, Baret F (2004)
Review of methods for in situ leaf area index determination - Part I. Theories, sensors and hemispherical photography. Agricultural and Forest Meteorology 121 (1-2): 19-35.
CrossRef | Gscholar
(17)
Lang ARG, Yuequin X (1986)
Estimation of leaf area index from transmission of direct sunlight in discontinuous canopies. Agricultural and Forest Meteorology 37 (3): 229-243.
CrossRef | Gscholar
(18)
Larcher W (1977)
Ecofisiología vegetal. Ediciones Omega, SA, Barcelona, Spain, pp. 531. [in Spanish]
Gscholar
(19)
Leblanc SG, Chen JM (2001)
A practical scheme for correcting multiple scattering effects on optical LAI measurements. Agricultural and Forest Meteorology 110: 125-139.
CrossRef | Gscholar
(20)
Leblanc SG (2002)
Correction to the plant canopy gap-size analysis theory used by the tracing radiation and architecture of canopies instrument. Applied Optics 41 (36): 7667-7670.
CrossRef | Gscholar
(21)
Leblanc SG, Chen JM, Fernandes R, Deering DW, Conley A (2005)
Methodology comparison for canopy structure parameters extraction from digital hemispherical photography in boreal forests. Agricultural and Forest Meteorology 129: 187-207.
CrossRef | Gscholar
(22)
Lopes DM (2005)
Estimating net primary production in Eucalyptus globulus and Pinus pinaster ecosystems in Portugal. PhD thesis, Kingston University, London, UK, pp. 286.
Gscholar
(23)
Lopes DM, Aranha JT (2004)
A proposed methodology to estimate the carbon sequestration in a Pinus pinaster stand. In: Proceedings of the “Portuguese-Spanish IGBP Seminar 2004: Global Change and Sustainability”. Évora (Portugal) 15-17 April 2004. IGBP Publisher, Poster V.2.
Gscholar
(24)
Lopes DM, Aranha JT, Walford N, Brien J, Lucas N (2009)
Accuracy of remote sensing data versus other sources of information for estimating net primary production in Eucalyptus globulus Labill. and Pinus pinaster Ait. ecosystems in Portugal. Canadian Journal of Remote Sensing 35 (1): 37-53.
CrossRef | Gscholar
(25)
Macfarlane C, Hoffman M, Eamus D, Kerp N, Higginson S, McMurtrie R, Adams M (2007a)
Estimation of leaf area index in eucalypt forest using digital photography. Agricultural and Forest Meteorology 143 (3-4): 176-188.
CrossRef | Gscholar
(26)
Macfarlane C, Arndt S, Livesley SJ, Edgar AC, White DA, Adams MA, Eamus D (2007b)
Estimating of leaf area index in eucalypt forest with vertical foliage, using cover and fullframe fisheye photography. Forest Ecology and Management 242: 756-763.
CrossRef | Gscholar
(27)
Nemani RR, Running SW (1989)
Testing a theoretical climate-soil-leaf area hydrologic equilibrium of forests using satellite data and ecosystem simulation. Agricultural and Forest Meteorology 44: 245-260.
CrossRef | Gscholar
(28)
Pompelli MF, Antunes WC, Ferreira DTRG, Cavalcante PGS, Wanderley-Filho HCL, Endres L (2012)
Allometric models for non-destructive leaf area estimation of Jatropha curcas. Biomass and Bioenergy 36: 77-85.
CrossRef | Gscholar
(29)
R Development Core Team (2011)
R: a language and environment for statistical computing. R Foundation for Statistical Computing, Vienna, Austria. URL.
Online | Gscholar
(30)
Ryu Y, Nilson T, Kobayashi H, Sonnentag O, Law BE, Baldocchi DD (2010)
On the correct estimation of effective leaf area index: does it reveal information on clumping effects? Agricultural and Forest Meteorology 150: 463-447.
CrossRef | Gscholar
(31)
Snedecor GW, Cochran WG (1995)
Statistical methods (6th edn). Iowa State University Press, Ames, Iowa, USA, pp. 503.
Gscholar
(32)
Stenberg P, Nilson T, Smolander H, Voipio P (2003)
Gap fraction based estimation of LAI in Scots pine stands subjected to experimental removal of branches and stems. Canadian Journal of Remote Sensing 29 (3): 363-370.
CrossRef | Gscholar
(33)
Van Gardingen PR, Jackson GE, Hernandez-Daumas S, Russell G, Sharp L (1999)
Leaf area index estimates obtained for clumped canopies using hemispherical photography. Agricultural and Forest Meteorology 94 (3-4): 243-257.
CrossRef | Gscholar
(34)
Viana H, Aranha J, Lopes D, Cohen WB (2012)
Estimation of crown biomass of Pinus pinaster stands and shrubland above-ground biomass using forest inventory data, remotely sensed imagery and spatial prediction models. Ecological Modelling 226: 22-35.
CrossRef | Gscholar
(35)
Zarate-Valdez JL, Whiting ML, Lampinen BD, Metcalf S, Ustin SL, Brown PH (2012)
Prediction of leaf area index in almonds by vegetation indexes. Computers and Electronics in Agriculture 85: 24-32.
CrossRef | Gscholar
 

This website uses cookies to ensure you get the best experience on our website. More info