Open Access
How to translate text using browser tools
1 January 2020 Tree Crown Size Estimated Using Image Processing: A Biodiversity Index for Sloping Subtropical Broad-Leaved Forests
Hitoshi Matsumoto, Masato Ohtani, Izumi Washitani
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

Forest patches characterized by old trees with large crown sizes are of high biodiversity conservation value because they contain various microhabitats and may preserve the original flora of primeval or ancient forests. Aerial photo estimations of the average tree crown size represent a promising approach for identifying and monitoring such forest patches. Numerous sensors and algorithms have been developed to estimate the crown size in coniferous forests or forests with relatively low topographic variations; however, methods for estimating the crown size in steep broad-leaved forests in tropical or temperate regions are still required. We propose a method of estimating the size of tree crowns to obtain the “crown size index (CSI),” which can be used as a candidate biodiversity index for steep broad-leaved forest patches. We applied this method to a subtropical broad-leaved forest in southwestern Japan. In the first step, gray values from aerial imagery are converted to relative values, and then the crown size is subjected to a granulometric estimation. Regression of the CSI from the diameter at breast height of the canopy layer trees presented R2 values as high as 0.67. Resampling tests revealed that monochrome aerial images resampled with spatial resolutions ranging from 0.40 m to 1.20 m produced results with relatively high accuracy (R2≥ .55). These results suggest that the proposed method has the potential for use as a cost-effective method of evaluating the biodiversity of broad-leaved forest patches in hilly or mountainous regions using images from various high-resolution sensors.

Forest crown size is a key structure related to ecosystem functions, such as timber production, nutrient cycling, and carbon storage (Song, Dickinson, Su, Zhang, & Yaussey, 2010), which are of considerable concern to human societies. Crown size is also related to forest mosaic patch biodiversity (Bengtsson, Nilsson, Franc, & Menozzi, 2000; Nagendra et al., 2013), which shifts dynamically according to both human interventions and natural disturbances (Pickett & White, 1985).

Because of the allometric relationships among tree structure variables (Kira & Shidei, 1967), a forest patch characterized by a large crown size is likely to have a high proportion of old trees and include old-growth or mature forest patches that have escaped major human interventions for a relatively long time (Burrascano, Keeton, Sabatini, & Blasi, 2013; Whitman & Hagan, 2007). Such forest patches may have a high biodiversity value because highly developed complex structures of both living and dead trees generate a large variety of microhabitats for plants and animals, including tree hollows and coarse woody debris rotting to various degrees (Brokaw & Lent, 1999; Cockle, Martin, & Robledo, 2012; Kruys, Fries, Jonsson, Lämås, & Ståhl, 1999; Nilsson et al., 2002; Speight, 1989; Stokland, Siitonen, & Jonsson, 2012; Winter & Möller, 2008). These microhabitats can provide vertebrates, invertebrates, plants, bryophytes, lichens, and fungi with food, nests, and regeneration substrates (Butin & Kowalski, 1983; Jonsell, Hansson, & Wedmo, 2007; Kennedy & Quinn, 2001; Speight, 1989; Stokland et al., 2012; Takahashi, Sakai, Ootomo, & Shiozaki, 2000).

Moreover, old-growth patches that have escaped major disturbances may preserve flora of high conservation value (Honnay, Degroote, & Hermy, 1998) known as “ancient forest species,” which are characterized by a high shade tolerance, low colonizing ability, and preference for mesic environments (Bossuyt, Heyn, & Hermy, 2002; Brown & Oosterhuist, 1981; Hermy, Honnay, Firbank, Grashof-Bokdam, & Lawesson, 1999; Peterken, 1974; Whitney & Foster, 1988).

In recent years, a number of researchers have attempted to estimate tree crown size with various algorithms and high spatial resolution aerial or satellite images (Culvenor, 2002; Hirata, 2008; Leckie, Gougeon, Walsworth, & Paradine, 2003; Song & Woodcock, 2003; Wang, Gong, & Biging, 2004; Wulder, Niemann, & Goodenough, 2000). Irrespective of the target and the purpose of the estimation, these efforts have generally employed two-step algorithms, with tree crown detection as the first step and crown delineation as the second step (Ke & Quackenbush, 2011). Tree crown detection algorithms detect treetops based on the local maximum of gray values, whereas delineation algorithms define the outline of tree crowns by delineating the valleys of gray values because gray values are higher at treetops, which reflect more solar light and are lower toward crown boundaries.

Most previous studies have focused on coniferous plantations or relatively homogenous high-latitude boreal forests consisting of conical crown trees on flat land,that is, a forest with relatively low topographic variations (Ke & Quackenbush, 2011), and few studies have attempted to estimate the tree crowns of primeval or secondary tropical to temperate forests of high biodiversity value, which primarily consist of broad-leaved trees with a greater variety of species and ages.

Compared with conical crowns where the tops and boundaries are easily detectable in remotely sensed imagery, the tops or boundaries of irregularly shaped crowns of broad-leaved trees are difficult to identify. As such, the algorithms developed for conifer forests are less effective for broad-leaved trees. Song (2007) and Song et al. (2010) estimated the average tree crown size on a forest stand basis based on the behavior of image semivariograms at different spatial resolutions of satellite imagery of North American forests and reported a considerably higher accuracy for average tree crown size estimations of a conifer stand (R2 = .73) than of a broad-leaved stand (R2 = .60).

Moreover, heterogeneity in the species, age, and arrangement of the trees in natural forests increase the difficulty of performing estimations (Ke & Quackenbush, 2011; Pouliot & King, 2005). To overcome the problems caused by highly heterogeneous crown structures, the use of granulometry, a pixel-basis algorithm, is a promising alternative. Heinzel, Weinacker, and Koch (2011) employed this method to estimate the crown size of a flat deciduous forest in Europe. Matsumoto, Ishii, Ohtani, and Washitani (2014) also delineated single crowns using an object-based image analysis and estimated the average crown size in a flat beech forest in northern Japan, and the regression accuracy for the estimated average tree crown size based on the average of canopy tree diameter at breast height (DBH) measured in the field was R2 = .55. These pixel-based methods can be applied to forest patches with unclear stand boundaries.

Previous studies have developed algorithms that are primarily applicable to flat forests with simple topographies. However, forests that are important from a biodiversity perspective in subtropical or temperate regions, such as Japan, Europe, and eastern North America, are primarily located in remote hills or mountains free from most human interventions (Biodiversity Center of Japan, 2010; Peterken, 1996). In the tropics, most lowland natural forests have been lost (Turner & Corlett, 1996), and there is growing concern for the conservation of mountainous forests. To meet the growing needs for biodiversity evaluations of such natural and secondary forests, cost-efficient algorithms for estimating crown size that can be applied to broad-leaved forests in hilly or mountainous regions with complicated topographies must be developed.

In this study, we attempted to develop a two-step method of estimating the average tree crown size in mature or secondary broad-leaved forest patches on steep hills using high spatial resolution aerial photographs. We first developed an image conversion algorithm to treat varying patterns of brightness or shadows in remotely sensed images of steep forests with slopes that differ greatly in direction. These converted images were processed by granulometry to estimate the tree crown size (pixel-based crown size index [CSI]).

To use crown size as an index for biodiversity evaluations, determining the size for each single crown is not always necessary, and the average or representative value for forest patches may be more appropriate. The representative tree crown size within a certain region can be acquired by averaging the pixel-based CSI in the region. We tested the validity of this method against the tree size parameter measured on the ground.

The chosen study site is an evergreen broad-leaved forest in the steep hills of Amami Oshima Island, southwestern Japan. The “subtropical forests of Nansei Islands,” including Amami Oshima Island, are one of the world’s biodiversity hotspots (Rodrigues et al., 2004), and a plan to establish a new forest nature reserve system in central Amami Oshima Island has been considered by the Ministry of the Environment (Naha Nature Conservation Office, 2008) to designate Amami Gunto National Park in 2017. The method proposed here could be used not only at the planning stage to select the appropriate protected areas for a nature reserve but also after the establishment to periodically monitor the area.

Method

Study Area

The study site is located in Kinsakubaru National Forest (28.320°N ∼ 28.356°N, 129.439°E ∼ 129.464°E, 477 ha) on the central Amami Oshima Island (Figure 1). The zone at 165 m ∼ 450 m above sea level is covered with a mosaic of mature and secondary patches of East Asian subtropical-type evergreen broad-leaved forest (Ohsawa, 1990; Tagawa, 1995). The canopies of mature and secondary forest patches are dominated by Castanopsis sieboldii (Makino) Hatus. ex T. Yamaz. et Mashiba and Schima wallichii (DC.) Korth. subsp. noronhae (Reinw. ex Blume) Bloemb., which grow on steep slopes with highly variable azimuths (Figure 2). The crown diameters of canopy layer trees in this study area ranged from approximately 1 m to 8 m, and the tree density of canopy layer trees ranged from approximately 350 to 4000 per ha. The canopies of the patches are largely closed regardless of the length of time since the last clear-cut.

Figure 1.

Location of Amami Oshima Island and Kinsakubaru National Forest.

10.1177_1940082917721787-fig1.tif

Figure 2.

Elevation of Kinsakubaru National Forest.

10.1177_1940082917721787-fig2.tif

Aerial Photograph

A digital color (Blue-Green-Red [BGR]) aerial photograph was taken by the Geospatial Information Authority of Japan at 10:32 + 0900 (Japan Standard Time [JST]), December 3, 2008, with a solar azimuth angle of 152°. This image was taken at a scale of 1:20,000, and the ground sample size for each pixel was 0.40 m.

We excluded areas without tree crowns, such as roads or grasslands, and the area where single tree crowns could not be recognized because of deep shadows caused by topography. The accuracies of CSIs estimated from spectral bands were compared, and we only used Band 2 (green), which is generally selected for processing natural color imagery (Ke & Quackenbush, 2011) for further analyses. The image was georeferenced manually with six ground control points (the root-mean-square error was 1.4 m).

Image Processing

We adopted an image processing algorithm to simplify the highly variable patterns of brightness or shadows in the remotely sensed imagery of variably sloping forests. After this conversion, we estimated the tree crown size using granulometry and tested the validity of the procedure through a regression on field-measured tree size data.

Image conversion for reducing slope azimuth effects

In an aerial image of forest patches on steep hills, the solar incident angle into the canopy surface varies depending on the slope azimuthal angle, which leads to varying patterns of brightness or shadows. With such aerial images, it is difficult to apply a uniform algorithm to the entire image. However, within the scope of a few crowns (25 pixels/circle in this case, which is referred to as the neighboring domain, D, below), the basic pattern of brightness or darkness is common regardless of the slope azimuth; therefore, the gray values are higher near treetops and lower around crown boundaries. In the following Equation 1, we converted the original gray values to relative values that represent the relative brightness within the scope of a few crowns around each pixel.

(1)

10.1177_1940082917721787-eq1.tif
where X is the relative gray value, x is the original gray value, k is an integer value, F is the cumulative distribution function of standard normal distribution, µ is an averaged original gray value within the neighboring domain D, and σ is the standard deviation of original gray value within D.

The mean µ and the standard deviation σ of the original gray value x were calculated for each pixel within the neighboring domain D. D is circular with a radius of 25 pixels (10 m). This method supposes that both treetops and crown boundaries are included in a single neighboring domain, that is, D must not be included within a single tree crown. Our visual observation of the aerial photograph ascertained that a radius of 25 pixels is large enough to include at least the two largest tree crowns. The probability variables that divide the cumulative distribution of the Gaussian distribution with the mean µ and the standard deviation σ into 20 parts were calculated. The smallest of these probability variables that was greater than x was designated as the relative gray value (1 ≤ X ≤ 20). The original and the converted image of the representative aerial photograph scene are shown in Figure 3.

Figure 3.

Aerial images with (right) or without (left) image conversion by the processing algorithm described in the text.

10.1177_1940082917721787-fig3.tif

Granulometry

The tree crown size was estimated using the granulometry method, which calculates a size distribution of grains in the images based on the mathematical morphology (Heinzel et al., 2011). In our study, individual tree crowns and crown boundaries were regarded as the grains and the background, respectively. The two basic mathematical morphology operations are erosion and dilation. These operations process gray values within a structural element (SE), which is represented by an image with a certain shape and size. Erosion assigns the minimum gray values within the SE to the center pixel, and dilation assigns the maximum values to the center pixel (Soille, 2004). The process of erosion followed by dilation is called opening, and it eliminates objects smaller than the SE in the image (Figure 4).

Figure 4.

Operations of mathematical morphology for a specific structuring element. Binary images are shown for demonstration.

10.1177_1940082917721787-fig4.tif

Granulometry deduces the dominant object size within a moving window by comparing the sum of the gray values of the opened and original imagery. In our study, we applied a circular moving window with a 15-pixel (6.0 m) radius as S. The 15-pixel radius was large enough to include the largest tree crown in our study site.

Both converted and nonconverted aerial photographs were opened with 10-size classes of circular SEs whose radius lgr; ranged from 1 pixel (0.40 m at the ground level) to 10 pixels (4.0 m). The center of the SE was positioned at every pixel of the image. The size range of the SEs conformed well to the crown size in the study site. A preliminary analysis showed that when the SE had a radius greater than 10 pixels, it caused more outliers because it included apparently merged crowns or relatively bright matrices, such as canopy gaps. In a forest where the crown size of the canopy layer trees is heterogeneous, a larger moving window not only demands greater computational effort but also includes different forest patches, which results in larger estimation errors.

The ratio Rs(lgr;)is the sum of the gray values of the opened image with an SE of radius lgr; divided by the sum of the gray values of the original image in the moving window S. Figure 5 shows the Rs(lgr;) plotted against lgr; for the image of Figure 4. The Rs(lgr;)decreases as the SE expands, and the decrease reaches a peak value when the size of the SE best fits the dominant object size within the moving window. The crown size at a particular pixel, which is referred to below as the pixel-based CSI, was estimated as the moving window size lgr; that caused the maximum decrease of the Rs(lgr;).

Figure 5.

An example of granulometric analysis on the image from Figure 4. Plot of the sum of the gray values of the opened image divided by the sum of the gray values of the original image (RS(lgr;)) and the difference (ΔRS(lgr;)) with regard to the radius of the structuring element (lgr;).

10.1177_1940082917721787-fig5.tif

Image resampling

To evaluate the range of pixel sizes over which the proposed method is useful, we resampled the Band 2 imagery, and the accuracy of the estimations was compared. The original imagery was resampled to generate a series of six images that had pixel sizes of 0.60 × 0.60, 0.80 × 0.80, 1.20 × 1.20, and 1.60 × 1.60 m. The gray value of the resampled pixel was the average of the gray values of the original pixels (Jones & Vaughan, 2010), except for the pixel size of 0.60, which is not an integral multiple of the original pixel size. For the pixel size of 0.60 m, we used the bilinear interpolation method, which calculates the distance-weighted average of the four nearest pixels. Each resampled image was converted to relative gray values, and the CSI was calculated.

We used the Spatial Analyst extension of ArcGIS 10 (Esri Inc., Redlands, CA) for the aerial imagery processing.

Field Measurement

To collect ground reference data on the size of the canopy layer trees, we conducted field measurements from November 25 to December 6, 2013, from February 24 to March 2, 2014, and from November 18 to November 22, 2014. A total of 22 sampling plots were outlined based on our visual observation of the aerial photograph prior to the field measurement and were recorded in the GPS (GeoExplorer 6000 series handheld, Trimble, CO). The study area had not experienced any large human or natural disturbances, such as forest fire or landslide, since 2008, when the aerial photograph was taken. Each plot was located in mature forest patches or secondary forest patches with a closed canopy, where the average size of the canopy layer trees was relatively uniform. Sampling plots were square or rectangular with an area of 1 ha.

Because of the steep slopes and the existence of dangerous venomous snake Protobothrops flavoviridis, it was difficult to collect ground reference data over large continuous areas or to measure the crown size of every tree; therefore, we set up two 100 m2 quadrats in each plot and measured the DBH of all canopy layer trees in the quadrats. Each plot was located on microtopographies, where we can conduct field measurements safely (mostly on slopes with an angle of 10 – 44°) and where the tree size was representative of the forest stand. To avoid the influence of canopy change due to finer natural disturbances, such as strong winds since 2008, we did not set quadrats in canopy gaps that are not recognized in the aerial photograph. The location of each quadrat was recorded with GPS.

Statistical Analyses

The CSI estimated at each pixel size was averaged within each sampling plot (converted0.40, converted0.60 … converted1.60). The estimated CSI of the nonconverted imagery was also averaged within each sampling plot (original0.40).

To evaluate the effectiveness of the image conversion, we performed a series of regression analyses between the logarithm of the averaged DBH and the logarithm of the CSI. The allometric relationships between DBH and crown diameter are species and site specific (Dietze, Wolosin, & Clark, 2008; Song et al., 2010). However, in our study site, it is not realistic to construct allometric models for all canopy layer species because of the high diversity of canopy layer species and difficulties of data collection due to steep topographies. Allometric relationships are known to differ among life history traits in some tropical or warm-temperature broad-leaved forests (Aiba & Kohyama, 1997; Iida et al., 2011). The dominant species, C. sieboldii and S. wallichii subsp. noronhae, are both evergreen broad-leaved trees that construct subtropical mature forest, while pioneer species with wider crowns, such as charcoal-tree (Trema orientalis L.) or Luchu pine (Pinus luchuensis Mayr.), are rare in the canopy layer, and so approximation by log-log relationship was applied between the plot mean CSI and the plot mean DBH.

We first compared the R2 of the regression analyses with or without image conversion. The influence of slope direction on the estimation results was subsequently examined. A multiple regression analysis was conducted with the logarithm of converted0.40 as the response variable and the logarithm of the averaged DBH and the cosine of the angle formed by the solar azimuth and slope direction (COS) as the explanatory variables. The COS takes a higher value when the slope direction is consistent with the solar azimuth angle, and it was calculated within the sampling plot using a 10 -m digital elevation model (DEM).

The R2 of the regression between the logarithm of the averaged DBH and the logarithm of the averaged CSI estimated with aerial images of different pixel sizes was also compared.

Statistical analyses were conducted with ArcGIS 10 (ESRI Inc., Redlands, CA) and R 3.0.1 (R Development Core Team, 2013).

Results

Effectiveness of Image Conversion

We sampled a total of 562 canopy layer trees (49 species). There were 547 trees (44 species) that were evergreen broad-leaved trees, 9 trees were deciduous broad-leaved trees (4 species: Cordia dichotoma G.Forst., Idesia polycarpa Maxim., Styrax japonica Siebold et Zucc., and Toxicodendron succedaneum (L.) Kuntze), and 6 trees were evergreen coniferous trees (1 species: Nageia nagi [Thunb.] Kuntze). There were 241 trees (42.9 %) that were C. sieboldii, and 82 trees (14.6 %) were S. wallichii subsp. noronhae, while the proportion of every other species was less than 5%. The averaged DBH of all the recorded trees was 20 cm. The maximum value, 75th percentile, median, 25th percentile, and minimum value of the DBH were 93 cm, 25 cm, 16 cm, 10 cm, and 2 cm, respectively. The average, maximum value, median, and minimum value of the number of trees within the two quadrats in each plot was 26, 80, 18, and 7, respectively. The maximum value, median, and minimum value of the averaged DBH in each plot were 50 cm, 25 cm, and 10 cm, respectively.

Double logarithmic plots of the DBH of the canopy layer trees and the averaged CSI are shown in Figure 6. The regression analysis showed that the converted0.40 values calculated using each spectral band had significant positive correlations with the averaged DBH of the canopy layer trees. The R2 of the regression was the highest for Band 2 (0.67) and the lowest for Band 3 (0.56). The original0.40 had significant positive correlations with the averaged DBH for only Band 1, and the R2 was lower for every spectral band than for the converted0.40 (Table 1).

Figure 6.

Plot of the logarithm of the averaged diameter at breast height against the logarithm of the converted0.40 (lower) and original0.40 (upper) values.

10.1177_1940082917721787-fig6.tif

Table 1.

Results of the Double-Logarithmic Regressions of the DBH of the Canopy Layer Trees on the Averaged CSI for Each Spectral Band.

10.1177_1940082917721787-table1.tif

The multiple regression analysis showed that the DBH was the only parameter with a significant positive correlation with the averaged CSI for Band 2 (β = .173, p < .001). The COS was not significantly correlated with the averaged CSI (β = −.011, p = .62). As shown in Figure 7, the COS showed a significant positive correlation with the difference between the original0.40 and converted0.40 values of Band 2 (β = .798, p < .001). Original0.40 tended to be overestimated where the slope faced the sun.

Figure 7.

Plot of the difference between the original0.40 and converted0.40 values against the cosine of the angle formed by the solar azimuth and slope direction.

10.1177_1940082917721787-fig7.tif

Estimation at Different Pixel Sizes

The resampled images are shown in Figure 8. The 0.40 m-pixel size image is able to differentiate a forest patch on the right side that was composed of smaller trees; however, smaller trees are not discernible as single objects, and the crown boundaries of larger trees become obscure in coarser images. For example, a tree crown with a diameter of 1.5 m is composed of 11 pixels in the 0.40-m pixel size image, whereas it is composed of less than a single pixel in the 1.60-m pixel size image. The series of double-logarithmic regression analyses showed that each averaged CSI for Band 2 had a significant relationship with the DBH of the canopy layer trees. The R2 of the regression declined as the image became coarser and dropped below 0.50 at the 1.60-m pizel size (Figure 9, Table 2).

Figure 8.

Aerial images resampled with different pixel sizes. Pixel sizes are shown at the upper left of the images.

10.1177_1940082917721787-fig8.tif

Figure 9.

Plot of the logarithm of the averaged diameter at breast height against the logarithm of averaged crown size index at different pixel sizes.

10.1177_1940082917721787-fig9.tif

Table 2.

Results of the Double-Logarithmic Regressions of the DBH of Canopy Layer Trees on the Averaged CSI Calculated With the Band 2 Images of Different Pixel Sizes.

10.1177_1940082917721787-table2.tif

Discussion

Effectiveness of Image Conversion

The image conversion algorithm adopted here satisfactorily improved the estimation accuracy of the average tree crown size in a forest patch on steep hills, and the slope direction did not have a significant effect on the results. With nonconverted imagery, a marked overestimation of the tree crown size on slopes facing the sun was apparent, which may reflect differing patterns of shadows created by solar light entering at different incident angles. On a slope facing the sun, the solar light enters the canopy surface with an incident angle close to perpendicular; therefore, the area reflecting solar light is larger (even on crown boundaries), and the crown area may be overestimated or several crowns may be merged together because the shadows on the crown boundaries are obscured. However, on a slope opposite from the sun, the solar light enters the canopy surface sideways; therefore, less solar light enters the crown boundaries, and the crown size could be underestimated because of larger shadows between the tree crowns. The image conversion performed in this study satisfactorily enhanced the estimation accuracy by highlighting shadows between crowns on slopes facing the sun and by increasing the brightness of crown boundaries on shady slopes.

Few studies have tried to estimate the average tree crown size in broad-leaved forests (Ke & Quackenbush, 2011), and the estimation accuracy was lower compared to coniferous forests. Matsumoto et al. (2014) reported an R2 of .55 in a double logarithmic regression analysis between the field-measured DBH and the estimated tree crown area using object-based image analysis. Song et al. (2010) reported an R2 of .60 in a broad-leaved stand and an R2 of .73 in a coniferous stand. Although our R2 cannot be simply compared to the R2 of Song et al. (2010), where allometric parameters between the DBH and the crown diameter were calculated for each tree species, our method can be a practical means of vegetation mapping to find forest stands characterized by large crown diameters in a steep broad-leaved forest. Future studies are needed to ascertain the effectiveness of this method as a biodiversity index through application over a regional scale and comparing to the spatial biodiversity patterns that have been recognized by other data sources.

Estimation at Different Spectral Bands or Different Pixel Sizes

The R2 of the regression analysis was the highest for Band 2 (green), suggesting that the relatively high reflectance of green light from forest canopies highlighted the gray-value differences between treetops and crown boundaries.

The R2 of the regression declined with increasing pixel size, especially for the image with a pixel size of 1.60 m. Generally, in an image of larger pixel sizes, crown boundaries are obscure, and smaller crowns cannot be recognized as a single object. In our study area, the smallest crowns are difficult to be discerned in the 0.80-m pixel size images, but the plots with smaller DBH showed lower CSI in the images with a pixel size smaller than 0.80 m, while some plots with a smaller DBH in the images of a 1.20-m or 1.60m-pixel size showed relatively high CSI (Figure 9). In a 0.80-m pixel size image, even if individual crowns cannot be discerned, then the gray value of each pixel retained part of the reflection patterns formed by the treetops and crown boundaries (Figure 8). The tree crowns are apparently merged together in an image whose pixel size is larger than the tree crown size because the gray value of a pixel is made up of the reflection from a few crowns and crown boundaries, suggesting that the pixel size should be smaller than the smallest crown size for this method.

Systematic limitations may also be responsible for the lower estimation accuracy in coarser images. In the Spatial Analyst extension of ArcGIS 10, the intervals of the radius of opening cannot be less than the pixel size of the input data. As the pixel size increases, the number of classes that the estimated tree crown size can be assigned to declines, which increases the difficulty of discriminating finer differences. In our study, only three different opening sizes (1.60 m, 3.20 m, and 4.80 m in radius) were able to be assigned within the range of the maximum tree crown size for the 1.60 -m pixel size image. The R2 for the pixel size of 1.60 m was as low as 0.46, suggesting that a pixel size larger than one third of the maximum crown radius may not be suitable for the method proposed in this study.

Implications for Conservation

Aichi Biodiversity Target 11 commits parties of the Convention on Biological Diversity to conserve more areas of particular importance for biodiversity, such as tropical forests, through effectively and equitably managed, ecologically representative, and well-connected systems of protected areas (Convention on Biological Diversity [CBD], 2010). The tree crown size over the large forest area can be used not only as the first screening of the candidates of mature or old growth forests but also as basic information for management planning. Because remote sensing can be a cost-efficient method to monitor the tree crown size and its spatial heterogeneity, developing such a method that is applicable over a wider range of forest conditions would meet the conservation purposes.

Potential for Utilizing Various Sensors and Low-Cost Monitoring

Several remote sensing methods have been developed for forest monitoring, such as multispectral or hyperspectral methods, which distinguish finer differences of vegetation by using more than two spectral bands (Ishii & Washitani, 2007; Martin, Newman, Aber, & Congalton, 1998; Pettorelli et al., 2005; Sader, Waide, Lawrence, & Joyce, 1989), as well as airborne laser scanning methods, which acquire a 3-D model of the canopy surface (Hyyppä et al., 2008; Weishampel, Hightower, Chase, & Chase, 2012). Compared with these methods, which require specific types of data and are thus expensive, the method proposed in this study enables crown size estimations using monochrome data within a certain range of pixel sizes, such as the aerial images acquired by various institutions or high spatial resolution satellite images provided by IKONOS (1-m ground resolution in panchromatic mode) or Quickbird (0.6-m ground resolution in panchromatic mode; Ke & Quackenbush, 2011). Historical images acquired by governments, local authorities, or companies can be used to analyze the history of the forest.

CSI measurements estimated with the method proposed in this study may contribute to low-cost forest inventories and biodiversity monitoring. Processing monochromatic aerial or satellite images is much more cost effecting than acquiring and processing laser scanning data (Hummel, Hudak, Uebler, Falkowski, & Megown, 2011; Ke & Quackenbush, 2011).

Because many government offices, research institutions, and companies already use the software employed in this study (ArcGIS 10), the application of our methodology may not incur additional costs. This low total cost increases the likelihood that our methodology will be utilized by local authorities or developing countries to evaluate or monitor forest biodiversity for conservation purposes.

Precautions for Applications to Large Areas

This study estimated the average tree crown size in a forest patch with a closed canopy under the assumption that aerial images are composed of brighter treetops and darker crown boundaries. Therefore, the estimation accuracy should be lower in open woodlands where aerial images are composed of tree crowns and bare grounds or in shrublands where small crowns are arranged closely and do not have discernible boundaries in aerial images. In addition, in a mixture stand of canopy tree species with different life history traits, different allometric relationships among species might lower estimation accuracies.

The relationship between the estimated tree crown size and the biodiversity at a local scale may vary because of different canopy layer species, topographies, or historical human activities. The study site was an inland evergreen broad-leaved forest; however, coastal forests in the same region are characterized by different flora and fauna than mature inland forests (Miyawaki, 2013) because they are composed of pioneer tree species, such as charcoal-tree or Luchu pine, which have wider crowns (Shukla & Ramakrishnan, 1986). Canopy tree species and past human interventions should be considered when interpreting the crown-size index map at larger spatial scales because a coarser mosaic of different forest types may be included.

Authors’ Note

The commercial aerial photograph (photograph number: CKU20085X-C8B-12) and the 10 -m DEM were obtained from the Geospatial Information Authority of Japan ( http://mapps.gsi.go.jp/maplibSearch.do#1 and  http://fgd.gsi.go.jp/download/menu.php, respectively). Figure 1 and 2 were created using the GIS data obtained from the Geospatial Information Authority of Japan ( https://fgd.gsi.go.jp/download/menu.php) and the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport of Japan ( http://nlftp.mlit.go.jp/ksj/gml/datalist/KsjTmplt-A13.html).

Acknowledgments

The authors thank Ishikawa Takuya, Kimura Mariko, and members of Amami Mongoose Busters for providing helpful advice regarding the field surveys. The authors also thank Nishiyama Yutaka, Inoue Tohki, Inoue Natsumi, and Shinohara Naoto for providing support with the fieldwork. We also thank an anonymous reviewer for the thoughtful comments and advices.

Declaration of Conflicting Interests

The author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.

Funding

The author(s) disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: This study was partially supported by the Environmental Technology Development Fund, which is funded by the Ministry of the Environment, Japan (Subject NO. 4-1409), and JSPS KAKENHI Grant Number 26292181.

References

1.

Aiba, S. I., Kohyama, T., (1997) Crown architecture and life-history traits of 14 tree species in a warm-temperate rain forest: Significance of spatial heterogeneity. Journal of Ecology 85: 611–624. Google Scholar

2.

Bengtsson, J., Nilsson, S. G., Franc, A., Menozzi, P., (2000) Biodiversity, disturbances, ecosystem function and management of European forests. Forest Ecology and Management 132: 39–50. Google Scholar

3.

Biodiversity Center of Japan (2010) Biodiversity of Japan: A harmonious coexistence between nature and humankind, Tokyo, Japan: Heibonsya. Google Scholar

4.

Bossuyt, B., Heyn, M., Hermy, M., (2002) Seed bank and vegetation composition of forest stands of varying age in central Belgium: Consequences for regeneration of ancient forest vegetation. Plant Ecology 162: 33–48. Google Scholar

5.

Brokaw, N. V. L., Lent, R. A., (1999) Vertical structure. In: Hunter, M. L., (ed.) Maintaining biodiversity in forest ecosystems, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 373–399. Google Scholar

6.

Brown, A. H. F., Oosterhuist, L., (1981) The role of buried seed in coppicewoods. Biological Conservation 21: 19–38. Google Scholar

7.

Burrascano, S., Keeton, W. S., Sabatini, F. M., Blasi, C., (2013) Commonality and variability in the structural attributes of moist temperate old-growth forests: A global review (The natural pruning of branches and their biological preconditioning). Forest Ecology and Management 291: 458–479. Google Scholar

8.

Butin, H., Kowalski, T., (1983) Die natürliche Astreinigung und ihre biologischen Voraussetzungen [The natural pruning of branches and their biological preconditioning]. European Journal of Forest Pathology 13: 428–439. Google Scholar

9.

Convension on Biological Diversity (CBD). (2010). TARGET 11—Technical rationale extended (provided in document COP/10/INF/12/Rev.1). Retrieved from  https://www.cbd.int/sp/targets/rationale/target-11/Google Scholar

10.

Cockle, K. L., Martin, K., Robledo, G., (2012) Linking fungi, trees, and hole-using birds in a neotropical tree-cavity network: Pathways of cavity production and implications for conservation. Forest Ecology and Management 264: 210–219. Google Scholar

11.

Culvenor, D. S., (2002) TIDA: An algorithm for the delineation of tree crowns in high spatial resolution remotely sensed imagery. Computers & Geosciences 28: 33–44. Google Scholar

12.

Dietze, M. C., Wolosin, M. S., Clark, J. S., (2008) Capturing diversity and interspecific variability in allometries: A hierarchical approach. Forest Ecology and Management 256: 1939–1948. Google Scholar

13.

Heinzel, J. N., Weinacker, H., Koch, B., (2011) Prior-knowledge-based single-tree extraction. International Journal of Remote Sensing 32: 4999–5020. Google Scholar

14.

Hermy, M., Honnay, O., Firbank, L., Grashof-Bokdam, C., Lawesson, J. E., (1999) An ecological comparison between ancient and other forest plant species of Europe, and the implications for forest conservation. Biological Conservation 91: 9–22. Google Scholar

15.

Hirata, Y., (2008) Estimation of stand attributes in Cryptomeria japonica and Chamaecyparis obtusa stands using quickbird panchromatic data. Journal of Forest Research 13: 147–154. Google Scholar

16.

Honnay, O., Degroote, B., Hermy, M., (1998) Ancient-forest plant species in western Belgium: A species list and possible ecological mechanisms. Belgian Journal of Botany 130: 139–154. Google Scholar

17.

Hummel, S., Hudak, A., Uebler, E., Falkowski, M., Megown, K., (2011) A comparison of accuracy and cost of LIDAR versus stand exam data for landscape management on the Malheur national forest. Journal of Forestry 109: 267–273. Google Scholar

18.

Hyyppä, J., Hyyppä, H., Leckie, D., Gougeon, F., Yu, X., Maltamo, M., (2008) Review of methods of small-footprint airborne laser scanning for extracting forest inventory data in boreal forests. International Journal of Remote Sensing 29: 1339–1366. Google Scholar

19.

Iida, Y., Kohyama, T. S., Kubo, T., Kassim, A. R., Poorter, L., Sterck, F., Potts, M. D., (2011) Tree architecture and life-history strategies across 200 co-occurring tropical tree species. Functional Ecology 25: 1260–1268. Google Scholar

20.

Ishii, J., Washitani, I., (2007) Habitat analyses of six threatened plant species in a moist tall grassland based on hyperspectral-remotely sensed data. Global Environmental Research-English Edition 11: 161–169. Google Scholar

21.

Jones, H. G., Vaughan, R. A., (2010) Remote sensing of vegetation: Principles, techniques, and applications, Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press. Google Scholar

22.

Jonsell, M., Hansson, J., Wedmo, L., (2007) Diversity of saproxylic beetle species in logging residues in Sweden—Comparisons between tree species and diameters. Biological Conservation 138: 89–99. Google Scholar

23.

Kennedy, P. G., Quinn, T., (2001) Understory plant establishment on old-growth stumps and the forest floor in Western Washington. Forest Ecology and Management 154: 193–200. Google Scholar

24.

Ke, Y., Quackenbush, L. J., (2011) A review of methods for automatic individual tree-crown detection and delineation from passive remote sensing. International Journal of Remote Sensing 32: 4725–4747. Google Scholar

25.

Kira, T., Shidei, T., (1967) Primary production and turnover of organic matter in different forest ecosystems of the western pacific. Japanese Journal of Ecology 17: 70–87. Google Scholar

26.

Kruys, N., Fries, C., Jonsson, B. G., Lämås, T., Ståhl, G., (1999) Wood-inhabiting cryptogams on dead Norway spruce (Picea abies) trees in managed Swedish boreal forests. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 29: 178–186. Google Scholar

27.

Leckie, D. G., Gougeon, F. A., Walsworth, N., Paradine, D., (2003) Stand delineation and composition estimation using semi-automated individual tree crown analysis. Remote Sensing of Environment 85: 355–369. Google Scholar

28.

Martin, M. E., Newman, S. D., Aber, J. D., Congalton, R. G., (1998) Determining forest species composition using high spectral resolution remote sensing data. Remote Sensing of Environment 65: 249–254. Google Scholar

29.

Matsumoto, H., Ishii, J., Ohtani, M., Washitani, I., (2014) Identification of forest areas of high conservation value using the crown size index: A case study in secondary beech forests at the northern range limit. Japanese Journal of Conservation Ecology (in Japanese) 19: 67–77. Google Scholar

30.

Miyawaki, A. (2013). Vegetation of Japan, Okinawa and Ogasawara (in Japanese). Tokyo, Japan: Shibundo. Google Scholar

31.

Nagendra, H., Lucas, R., Honrado, J. P., Jongman, R. H. G., Tarantino, C., Adamo, M., Mairota, P., (2013) Remote sensing for conservation monitoring: Assessing protected areas, habitat extent, habitat condition, species diversity, and threats. Ecological Indicators 33: 45–59. Google Scholar

32.

Naha Nature Conservation Office. (2008). Basic points of views on conservation and utilization of natural resources in Amami region (draft) (in Japanese). Retrieved February 8, 2016, from  https://kyushu.env.go.jp/naha/nature/mat/data/m_3/m_3_3_3.pdfGoogle Scholar

33.

Nilsson, S. G., Niklasson, M., Hedin, J., Aronsson, G., Gutowski, J. M., Linder, P., Raniush, T., (2002) Densities of large living and dead trees in old-growth temperate and boreal forests. Forest Ecology and Management 161: 189–204. Google Scholar

34.

Ohsawa, M., (1990) An interpretation of latitudinal patterns of forest limits in South and East Asian mountains. The Journal of Ecology 78: 326–339. Google Scholar

35.

Peterken, G. F., (1974) A method for assessing woodland flora for conservation using indicator species. Biological Conservation 6: 239–245. Google Scholar

36.

Peterken, G. F., (1996) Natural woodland: Ecology and conservation in northern temperate regions, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. Google Scholar

37.

Pettorelli, N., Vik, J. O., Mysterud, A., Gaillard, J.-M., Tucker, C. J., Stenseth, N. C., (2005) Using the satellite-derived NDVI to assess ecological responses to environmental change. Trends in Ecology & Evolution 20: 503–510. Google Scholar

38.

Pickett, S. T. A., White, P. S., (1985) The Ecology of natural disturbance and patch dynamics, New York, US: Academic Press. Google Scholar

39.

Pouliot, D., King, D., (2005) Approaches for optimal automated individual tree crown detection in regenerating coniferous forests. Canadian Journal of Remote Sensing 31: 255–267. Google Scholar

40.

R Development Core Team. (2013). R: A language and environment for statistical computing. Retrieved February 16, 2016, from  https://cran.r-project.org/bin/windows/base/old/3.0.1/Google Scholar

41.

Rodrigues, A. S. L., Akçakaya, H. R., Andelman, S. J., Bakarr, M. I., Boitani, L., Brooks, T. M., Yan, X., (2004) Global gap analysis: Priority regions for expanding the global protected-area network. BioScience 54: 1092–1100. Google Scholar

42.

Sader, S. A., Waide, R. B., Lawrence, W. T., Joyce, A. T., (1989) Tropical forest biomass and successional age class relationships to a vegetation index derived from landsat TM data. Remote Sensing of Environment 28: 143–198. Google Scholar

43.

Shukla, R. P., Ramakrishnan, P. S., (1986) Architecture and growth strategies of tropical trees in relation to successional status. The Journal of Ecology 74: 33–46. Google Scholar

44.

Soille, P., (2004) Morphological image analysis: Principles and applications, Berlin, Germany: Springer Berlin Heidelberg. Google Scholar

45.

Song, C., (2007) Estimating tree crown size with spatial information of high resolution optical remotely sensed imagery. International Journal of Remote Sensing 28: 3305–3322. Google Scholar

46.

Song, C., Dickinson, M. B., Su, L., Zhang, S., Yaussey, D., (2010) Estimating average tree crown size using spatial information from Ikonos and QuickBird images: Across-sensor and across-site comparisons. Remote Sensing of Environment 114: 1099–1107. Google Scholar

47.

Song, C., Woodcock, C. E., (2003) Estimating tree crown size from multiresolution remotely sensed imagery. Photogrammetric Engineering & Remote Sensing 69: 1263–1270. Google Scholar

48.

Speight, M. C. D., (1989) Saproxylic invertebrates and their conservation, Strasbourg, France: Council of Europe. Google Scholar

49.

Stokland, J. N., Siitonen, J., Jonsson, B. G., (2012) Biodiversity in dead wood, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. Google Scholar

50.

Tagawa, H., (1995) Distribution of Lucidophyll Oak-Laurel forest formation in Asia and other areas. Tropics 5: 1–40. Google Scholar

51.

Takahashi, M., Sakai, Y., Ootomo, R., Shiozaki, M., (2000) Establishment of tree seedlings and water-soluble nutrients in coarse woody debris in an old-growth Picea abies forest in Hokkaido, Northern Japan. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 30: 1148–1155. Google Scholar

52.

Turner, I. M., Corlett, R. T., (1996) The conservation value of small, isolated fragments of lowland tropical rain forest. Trends in Ecology & Evolution 11: 330–333. Google Scholar

53.

Wang, L., Gong, P., Biging, G. S., (2004) Individual tree-crown delineation and treetop detection in high-spatial-resolution aerial imagery. Photogrammetric Engineering & Remote Sensing 70: 351–357. Google Scholar

54.

Weishampel, J. F., Hightower, J. N., Chase, A. F., Chase, D. Z., (2012) Use of airborne LiDAR to delineate canopy degradation and encroachment along the Guatemala-Belize border. Tropical Conservation Science 5: 12–24. Google Scholar

55.

Whitman, A. A., Hagan, J. M., (2007) An index to identify late-successional forest in temperate and boreal zones. Forest Ecology and Management 246: 144–154. Google Scholar

56.

Whitney, G. G., Foster, D. R., (1988) Overstorey composition and age as determinants of the understorey flora of woods of central New England. The Journal of Ecology 76: 867–876. Google Scholar

57.

Winter, S., Möller, G. C., (2008) Microhabitats in lowland beech forests as monitoring tool for nature conservation. Forest Ecology and Management 255: 1251–1261. Google Scholar

58.

Wulder, M., Niemann, K. O., Goodenough, D. G., (2000) Local maximum filtering for the extraction of tree locations and basal area from high spatial resolution imagery. Remote Sensing of Environment 73: 103–114. Google Scholar
© The Author(s) 2017 This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License (http://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) which permits any use, reproduction and distribution of the work without further permission provided the original work is attributed as specified on the SAGE and Open Access pages (https://us.sagepub.com/en-us/nam/open-access-at-sage).
Hitoshi Matsumoto, Masato Ohtani, and Izumi Washitani "Tree Crown Size Estimated Using Image Processing: A Biodiversity Index for Sloping Subtropical Broad-Leaved Forests," Tropical Conservation Science 10(1), (1 January 2020). https://doi.org/10.1177/1940082917721787
Received: 21 March 2017; Accepted: 26 June 2017; Published: 1 January 2020
KEYWORDS
cost-efficient evaluation of forest biodiversity
forest on steep hills or mountains
Granulometry
high-resolution imagery
protected area
Back to Top