A quantitative relationship between forest growth rates and Thematic Mapper reflectance measurements

Abstract
Effective forest management requires reliable forecasts of timber growth. In New Brunswick, the growth of spruce-fir stands is greatly affected by annual and cumulative defoliation caused by the spruce budworm. This study was designed to determine whether the Thematic Mapper (TM) could detect defoliation in a way which was correlated with stand growth well enough to be used as a predictive tool. Regression analysis was used to explore relationships between stand reflectance in the Thematic Mapper bands and stand volume and growth measured in permanent sample plots. Good (R 2>0.8) relationships were found between net annual spruce-fir volume change and vegetation condition indices incorporating TM near-infrared and shortwave infrared reflectances. Good relationships were also found between live spruce-fir volume and TM band 4 (near-infrared) reflectance. These results have encouraged us to plan a province-wide calibration and measurement programme aimed at improved stand development forecasts for the 1992 New Brunswick timber inventory and allocation.

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