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OLIVEIRA, M. V. N. d'; BROADBENT, E. N.; OLIVEIRA, L. C. de; ALMEIDA, D. R. A.; PAPA, D. de A.; FERREIRA, M. E.; ZAMBRANO, A. M. A.; SILVA, C. A.; AVINO, F. S.; PRATA, G. A.; MELLO, R. A.; FIGUEIREDO, E. O.; JORGE, L. A. de C.; JUNIOR, L.; ALBUQUERQUE, R. W.; BRANCALION, P. H. S.; WILKINSON, B.; COSTA, M. O. da. |
Tropical forests are often located in dicult-to-access areas, which make high-quality forest structure information dicult and expensive to obtain by traditional field-based approaches. LiDAR (acronym for Light Detection And Ranging) data have been used throughout the world to produce time-ecient and wall-to-wall structural parameter estimates for monitoring in native and commercial forests. In this study, we compare products and aboveground biomass (AGB) estimations from LiDAR data acquired using an aircraft-borne system in 2015 and data collected by the unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV)-based GatorEye Unmanned Flying Laboratory in 2017 for ten forest inventory plots located in the Chico Mendes Extractive Reserve in Acre state, southwestern Brazilian Amazon.... |
Tipo: Artigo de periódico |
Palavras-chave: Bosques tropicales; Inventario forestal; Monitoreo; Biomassa aérea; Teledetección; Vehículos aéreos no tripulados; Drone; GatorEye; Seringal Filipinas (AC); RESEX Chico Mendes; Acre; Amazônia Ocidental; Western Amazon; Amazonia Occidental; Floresta Tropical; Inventário Florestal; Reconhecimento Florestal; Estimativa; Sensoriamento Remoto; Raio Laser; Tropical forests; Forest inventory; Monitoring; Aboveground biomass; Remote sensing; Unmanned aerial vehicles; Lidar. |
Ano: 2020 |
URL: http://www.alice.cnptia.embrapa.br/alice/handle/doc/1122818 |
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