PhD ThesisLeaf Equivalent Water Thickness (EWT) is a water status metric widely used in vegetation health monitoring. Optical Remote Sensing (RS) data, spaceborne and airborne, can be used to estimate canopy EWT at landscape level, but cannot provide information about EWT vertical heterogeneity, or estimate EWT predawn. Dual-wavelength Terrestrial Laser Scanning (TLS) can overcome these limitations, as TLS intensity data, following radiometric corrections, can be used to estimate EWT in three dimensions (3D). In this study, a Normalized Difference Index (NDI) of 808 nm wavelength, utilized in the Leica P20 TLS instrument, and 1550 nm wavelength, employed in the Leica P40 and P50 TLS systems, was used to produce 3D EWT estimates at canopy le...
Quantitative equivalent water thickness on canopy level (EWTcanopy) is an important land surface var...
Forest leaf water content (LWC) plays a key role in many physiological processes such as plant growt...
The development of a dual-wavelength full-waveform terrestrial laser scanner to measure the three-di...
Decreased leaf moisture content, typically measured as equivalent water thickness (EWT), is an early...
Changing climate is increasing the amount and intensity of forest stress agents, such as drought, pe...
Changing climate is increasing the amount and intensity of forest stress agents, such as drought, pe...
During the past decades, extreme events have become more prevalent and last longer, and as a result ...
Climate change is increasing the amount and intensity of disturbance events, i.e. drought, pest inse...
Vegetation moisture content is an important early indicator of forest drought stress, disease and fi...
Terrestrial laser scanners (TLS) have the potential to revolutionise measurement of the three-dimens...
Quantitative equivalent water thickness on canopy level (EWTcanopy) is an important land surface var...
Forest leaf water content (LWC) plays a key role in many physiological processes such as plant growt...
The development of a dual-wavelength full-waveform terrestrial laser scanner to measure the three-di...
Decreased leaf moisture content, typically measured as equivalent water thickness (EWT), is an early...
Changing climate is increasing the amount and intensity of forest stress agents, such as drought, pe...
Changing climate is increasing the amount and intensity of forest stress agents, such as drought, pe...
During the past decades, extreme events have become more prevalent and last longer, and as a result ...
Climate change is increasing the amount and intensity of disturbance events, i.e. drought, pest inse...
Vegetation moisture content is an important early indicator of forest drought stress, disease and fi...
Terrestrial laser scanners (TLS) have the potential to revolutionise measurement of the three-dimens...
Quantitative equivalent water thickness on canopy level (EWTcanopy) is an important land surface var...
Forest leaf water content (LWC) plays a key role in many physiological processes such as plant growt...
The development of a dual-wavelength full-waveform terrestrial laser scanner to measure the three-di...