High-resolution canopy fuel maps based on GEDI: a foundation for wildfire modeling in Germany

Forest fuels are essential for wildfire behavior modeling and risk assessments but difficult to quantify accurately. An increase in fire frequency in recent years, particularly in regions traditionally not prone to fire, such as central Europe, has increased demands for large-scale remote sensing fu...

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Main Authors: Johannes Heisig, Milutin Milenković, Edzer Pebesma
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IOP Publishing 2025-01-01
Series:Environmental Research: Ecology
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1088/2752-664X/adaaf9
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author Johannes Heisig
Milutin Milenković
Edzer Pebesma
author_facet Johannes Heisig
Milutin Milenković
Edzer Pebesma
author_sort Johannes Heisig
collection DOAJ
description Forest fuels are essential for wildfire behavior modeling and risk assessments but difficult to quantify accurately. An increase in fire frequency in recent years, particularly in regions traditionally not prone to fire, such as central Europe, has increased demands for large-scale remote sensing fuel information. This study develops a methodology for mapping canopy fuels over large areas (Germany) at high spatial resolution, exclusively relying on open remote sensing data. We propose a two-step approach where we first use measurements from NASA’s Global Ecosystem Dynamics Investigation (GEDI) instrument to estimate canopy fuel variables at the footprint level, before predicting high-resolution raster maps. Instead of using field measurements, we generate (GEDI-) footprint-level estimates for canopy (Base) height (CH, CBH), cover (CC), bulk density (CBD), and fuel load (CFL) by segmenting airborne Light Detection and Ranging point clouds and processing tree-level metrics with allometric crown biomass models. To predict footprint-level canopy fuels we fit and tune Random Forest models, which are cross-validated using k -fold nearest neighbor distance matching. Predictions at >1.6 M GEDI footprints and biophysical raster covariates are combined with a universal Kriging method to produce countrywide maps at 20 m resolution. Agreement ( RMSE / R ^2 ) with validation data (from the same population) was strong for footprint-level predictions and moderate for map predictions. A validation with estimates based on National Forest Inventory data revealed low to modest agreement. Better accuracy was achieved for variables related to height (CH, CBH) rather than to cover or biomass (CBD, CFL). Error analysis pointed towards a mixture of biases in model predictions and validation data, as well as underestimation of model prediction standard errors. Contributing factors may be simplification through allometric equations and spatial and temporal mismatch of data inputs. The proposed workflow has the potential to support regions where wildfire is an emerging issue, and fuel and field information is scarce or unavailable.
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spelling doaj-art-df1125445a8847e08d6e2cb2da33c7912025-01-24T08:52:27ZengIOP PublishingEnvironmental Research: Ecology2752-664X2025-01-014101500310.1088/2752-664X/adaaf9High-resolution canopy fuel maps based on GEDI: a foundation for wildfire modeling in GermanyJohannes Heisig0https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3586-3001Milutin Milenković1https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3256-6669Edzer Pebesma2Institute for Geoinformatics, University of Münster , Heisenbergstraße 2, 48149 Münster, GermanyInternational Institute for Applied Systems Analysis , Schlossplatz 1, 2361 Laxenburg, AustriaInstitute for Geoinformatics, University of Münster , Heisenbergstraße 2, 48149 Münster, GermanyForest fuels are essential for wildfire behavior modeling and risk assessments but difficult to quantify accurately. An increase in fire frequency in recent years, particularly in regions traditionally not prone to fire, such as central Europe, has increased demands for large-scale remote sensing fuel information. This study develops a methodology for mapping canopy fuels over large areas (Germany) at high spatial resolution, exclusively relying on open remote sensing data. We propose a two-step approach where we first use measurements from NASA’s Global Ecosystem Dynamics Investigation (GEDI) instrument to estimate canopy fuel variables at the footprint level, before predicting high-resolution raster maps. Instead of using field measurements, we generate (GEDI-) footprint-level estimates for canopy (Base) height (CH, CBH), cover (CC), bulk density (CBD), and fuel load (CFL) by segmenting airborne Light Detection and Ranging point clouds and processing tree-level metrics with allometric crown biomass models. To predict footprint-level canopy fuels we fit and tune Random Forest models, which are cross-validated using k -fold nearest neighbor distance matching. Predictions at >1.6 M GEDI footprints and biophysical raster covariates are combined with a universal Kriging method to produce countrywide maps at 20 m resolution. Agreement ( RMSE / R ^2 ) with validation data (from the same population) was strong for footprint-level predictions and moderate for map predictions. A validation with estimates based on National Forest Inventory data revealed low to modest agreement. Better accuracy was achieved for variables related to height (CH, CBH) rather than to cover or biomass (CBD, CFL). Error analysis pointed towards a mixture of biases in model predictions and validation data, as well as underestimation of model prediction standard errors. Contributing factors may be simplification through allometric equations and spatial and temporal mismatch of data inputs. The proposed workflow has the potential to support regions where wildfire is an emerging issue, and fuel and field information is scarce or unavailable.https://doi.org/10.1088/2752-664X/adaaf9GEDIcanopyfuelsforestwildfireLiDAR
spellingShingle Johannes Heisig
Milutin Milenković
Edzer Pebesma
High-resolution canopy fuel maps based on GEDI: a foundation for wildfire modeling in Germany
Environmental Research: Ecology
GEDI
canopy
fuels
forest
wildfire
LiDAR
title High-resolution canopy fuel maps based on GEDI: a foundation for wildfire modeling in Germany
title_full High-resolution canopy fuel maps based on GEDI: a foundation for wildfire modeling in Germany
title_fullStr High-resolution canopy fuel maps based on GEDI: a foundation for wildfire modeling in Germany
title_full_unstemmed High-resolution canopy fuel maps based on GEDI: a foundation for wildfire modeling in Germany
title_short High-resolution canopy fuel maps based on GEDI: a foundation for wildfire modeling in Germany
title_sort high resolution canopy fuel maps based on gedi a foundation for wildfire modeling in germany
topic GEDI
canopy
fuels
forest
wildfire
LiDAR
url https://doi.org/10.1088/2752-664X/adaaf9
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AT milutinmilenkovic highresolutioncanopyfuelmapsbasedongediafoundationforwildfiremodelingingermany
AT edzerpebesma highresolutioncanopyfuelmapsbasedongediafoundationforwildfiremodelingingermany