50-6 Did a Tree Really Fall in the Forest? Incorporating Uncertainty Into Regional-Scale Monitoring of Forest Growth and Mortality Processes.
See more from this Division: Agriculture and Natural Resources Science for Climate Variability and Change: Transformational Advancements in Research, Education and ExtensionSee more from this Session: Scientific Inputs to Managing Natural Resources and the Environment Under a Changing Climate: Observations to Models to Decisions
Here, we describe an approach to link forest plot data (FIA; Forest Inventory and Analysis), environmental data, satellite-imagery, and aircraft-based lidar acquisitions to create a full assessment of carbon dynamics in forests. We incorporate methodological uncertainties introduced by our satellite processing, by our base multivariate statistical technique, and by the choice of allometric equation used to the convert estimated plot-measurements to site-level biomass and carbon.
Using the West Cascades province of Oregon and Northern California as a test case, we show that the combined impacts of methodological uncertainty vary both across forest types and over time, and may be particularly acute in early ecological succession. These patterns of uncertainty can not only help guide managers in their interpretation of mapped carbon changes on the landscape, but may provide a means of prioritizing future improvements in ground, aircraft, or satellite missions.
See more from this Session: Scientific Inputs to Managing Natural Resources and the Environment Under a Changing Climate: Observations to Models to Decisions