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Stand characteristics in colour-infrared aerial photographs as indicators of epiphytic lichens

Ask, Peter and Nilsson, Sven LU (2004) In Biodiversity and Conservation 13(3). p.529-542
Abstract
Information about forest biodiversity has so far been collected mostly by using field inventories, but it is desirable to find other methods that can cover large areas at a lower cost. In a forest landscape covering 2000 ha in southern Sweden we tested if colour-infrared (CIR) aerial photographs on the scale of 1:30000 can be used to interpret forest stand characteristics correlated to the occurrence of epiphytic lichens that are Red-listed or otherwise indicate high nature conservation value ('signal species'). Using logistic regression we found that the interpreted stand variables tree height and crown structure class were significantly correlated to the occurrence of Red-listed species. For signal species, the variables tree height,... (More)
Information about forest biodiversity has so far been collected mostly by using field inventories, but it is desirable to find other methods that can cover large areas at a lower cost. In a forest landscape covering 2000 ha in southern Sweden we tested if colour-infrared (CIR) aerial photographs on the scale of 1:30000 can be used to interpret forest stand characteristics correlated to the occurrence of epiphytic lichens that are Red-listed or otherwise indicate high nature conservation value ('signal species'). Using logistic regression we found that the interpreted stand variables tree height and crown structure class were significantly correlated to the occurrence of Red-listed species. For signal species, the variables tree height, percentage of southern deciduous trees and crown structure class were significantly correlated to the occurrence. The logistic regression models successfully predicted a significantly higher probability to find Red-listed species in the stands that actually contained such species compared to stands without Red-listed species. The same was true for stands with signal species. We conclude that interpretation of CIR aerial photographs could be a useful method to find certain groups of epiphytic lichens in surveys covering large areas. (Less)
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author
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organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
Biodiversity and Conservation
volume
13
issue
3
pages
529 - 542
publisher
Springer
external identifiers
  • wos:000187427000004
  • scopus:0842313167
ISSN
0960-3115
DOI
10.1023/B:BIOC.0000009488.93941.b2
project
SUFOR
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
622da775-ba5f-46d8-ba50-42e2e10dfa63 (old id 137098)
alternative location
http://dx.doi.org/10.1023/B:BIOC.0000009488.93941.b2
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 12:37:15
date last changed
2022-01-27 07:33:58
@article{622da775-ba5f-46d8-ba50-42e2e10dfa63,
  abstract     = {{Information about forest biodiversity has so far been collected mostly by using field inventories, but it is desirable to find other methods that can cover large areas at a lower cost. In a forest landscape covering 2000 ha in southern Sweden we tested if colour-infrared (CIR) aerial photographs on the scale of 1:30000 can be used to interpret forest stand characteristics correlated to the occurrence of epiphytic lichens that are Red-listed or otherwise indicate high nature conservation value ('signal species'). Using logistic regression we found that the interpreted stand variables tree height and crown structure class were significantly correlated to the occurrence of Red-listed species. For signal species, the variables tree height, percentage of southern deciduous trees and crown structure class were significantly correlated to the occurrence. The logistic regression models successfully predicted a significantly higher probability to find Red-listed species in the stands that actually contained such species compared to stands without Red-listed species. The same was true for stands with signal species. We conclude that interpretation of CIR aerial photographs could be a useful method to find certain groups of epiphytic lichens in surveys covering large areas.}},
  author       = {{Ask, Peter and Nilsson, Sven}},
  issn         = {{0960-3115}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{3}},
  pages        = {{529--542}},
  publisher    = {{Springer}},
  series       = {{Biodiversity and Conservation}},
  title        = {{Stand characteristics in colour-infrared aerial photographs as indicators of epiphytic lichens}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1023/B:BIOC.0000009488.93941.b2}},
  doi          = {{10.1023/B:BIOC.0000009488.93941.b2}},
  volume       = {{13}},
  year         = {{2004}},
}