Remotely sensed image time series to inform on forest structure and post-disturbance recovery over Canadian boreal forests

Over the last century Canadian boreal forests have warmed by 2-3° C, causing growing seasons to lengthen and alterations to annual productivity, which result in numerous responses from boreal tree species. Both disturbance and recovery cycles are affected, although change in northern Canadian boreal...

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Main Author: Frazier, Ryan James
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/58675
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spelling ftunivbritcolcir:oai:circle.library.ubc.ca:2429/58675 2023-05-15T18:30:43+02:00 Remotely sensed image time series to inform on forest structure and post-disturbance recovery over Canadian boreal forests Frazier, Ryan James 2016 http://hdl.handle.net/2429/58675 eng eng University of British Columbia Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ CC-BY-NC-ND Text Thesis/Dissertation 2016 ftunivbritcolcir 2019-10-15T18:20:46Z Over the last century Canadian boreal forests have warmed by 2-3° C, causing growing seasons to lengthen and alterations to annual productivity, which result in numerous responses from boreal tree species. Both disturbance and recovery cycles are affected, although change in northern Canadian boreal forests is difficult to detect, since they remain non-inventoried and lack detailed spatially explicit descriptive data. Through the use of Landsat time series, remote sensing offers the ability to map and monitor large forested areas over time to provide valuable information about boreal forests. The overall objective of this dissertation is to assess the capacity of remotely-sensed spectral time series to characterize forest recovery following disturbance in Canadian boreal forests. Major findings produced from the research presented in this dissertation show: • Boreal forest attributes are better estimated with Landsat time series metrics than single date information, and the inclusion of recovery metrics substantially improves accuracy • Choice of spectral index to monitor recovery is important, and the use of multiple spectral indexes can provide better and meaningful insights into forest recovery • The East/West division of the Boreal Shield ecozone is reinforced due differing spectral forest recovery trajectories that are suggestive of distinct recovery processes in each region. • Forest recovery rates are not fixed across the Boreal and Taiga Shield ecozones, with Taiga Shield spectral forest recovery rates showing a consistent positive trend, possibly indicating forests are recently recovering at an accelerated rate. The research presented in this dissertation advances the use of remote sensing to detect post-disturbance recovery in boreal forest ecosystems. Monitoring large forested areas such as the boreal for change is increasingly important as climatic conditions alter, and the spectral time series methods shown herein provide new tools to observe change in boreal forests. Future research directions are identified around first lengthening time series across longer periods of time, then extending these spectral time series approaches across jurisdictional lines in the pan-boreal region, and finally incorporating the data generated from these methods to be incorporated into carbon accounting frameworks. Forestry, Faculty of Graduate Thesis taiga Taiga shield University of British Columbia: cIRcle - UBC's Information Repository
institution Open Polar
collection University of British Columbia: cIRcle - UBC's Information Repository
op_collection_id ftunivbritcolcir
language English
description Over the last century Canadian boreal forests have warmed by 2-3° C, causing growing seasons to lengthen and alterations to annual productivity, which result in numerous responses from boreal tree species. Both disturbance and recovery cycles are affected, although change in northern Canadian boreal forests is difficult to detect, since they remain non-inventoried and lack detailed spatially explicit descriptive data. Through the use of Landsat time series, remote sensing offers the ability to map and monitor large forested areas over time to provide valuable information about boreal forests. The overall objective of this dissertation is to assess the capacity of remotely-sensed spectral time series to characterize forest recovery following disturbance in Canadian boreal forests. Major findings produced from the research presented in this dissertation show: • Boreal forest attributes are better estimated with Landsat time series metrics than single date information, and the inclusion of recovery metrics substantially improves accuracy • Choice of spectral index to monitor recovery is important, and the use of multiple spectral indexes can provide better and meaningful insights into forest recovery • The East/West division of the Boreal Shield ecozone is reinforced due differing spectral forest recovery trajectories that are suggestive of distinct recovery processes in each region. • Forest recovery rates are not fixed across the Boreal and Taiga Shield ecozones, with Taiga Shield spectral forest recovery rates showing a consistent positive trend, possibly indicating forests are recently recovering at an accelerated rate. The research presented in this dissertation advances the use of remote sensing to detect post-disturbance recovery in boreal forest ecosystems. Monitoring large forested areas such as the boreal for change is increasingly important as climatic conditions alter, and the spectral time series methods shown herein provide new tools to observe change in boreal forests. Future research directions are identified around first lengthening time series across longer periods of time, then extending these spectral time series approaches across jurisdictional lines in the pan-boreal region, and finally incorporating the data generated from these methods to be incorporated into carbon accounting frameworks. Forestry, Faculty of Graduate
format Thesis
author Frazier, Ryan James
spellingShingle Frazier, Ryan James
Remotely sensed image time series to inform on forest structure and post-disturbance recovery over Canadian boreal forests
author_facet Frazier, Ryan James
author_sort Frazier, Ryan James
title Remotely sensed image time series to inform on forest structure and post-disturbance recovery over Canadian boreal forests
title_short Remotely sensed image time series to inform on forest structure and post-disturbance recovery over Canadian boreal forests
title_full Remotely sensed image time series to inform on forest structure and post-disturbance recovery over Canadian boreal forests
title_fullStr Remotely sensed image time series to inform on forest structure and post-disturbance recovery over Canadian boreal forests
title_full_unstemmed Remotely sensed image time series to inform on forest structure and post-disturbance recovery over Canadian boreal forests
title_sort remotely sensed image time series to inform on forest structure and post-disturbance recovery over canadian boreal forests
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/58675
genre taiga
Taiga shield
genre_facet taiga
Taiga shield
op_rights Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
op_rightsnorm CC-BY-NC-ND
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