Measuring the canopy coverage of an oak savanna
Typical open canopy of a savanna. This is a July view of the northwest side of Unit 10. |
Quite a few methods for measuring a forest canopy cover
exist, but on-the-ground methods are very time-consuming. However, with a good
air photo, the analysis can be done very easily with GIS.
At Pleasant Valley Conservancy we have over 40 acres of
high-quality oak savanna and a similar amount of oak woodland. Because of the
heterogeneity of PVC, the canopy cover varies widely. I was interested in
determining the coverage of some different sites and I was also interested in
observing the changes in canopy coverage with time.
The general procedure in ArcMap was to overlay a digital
grid of dots over an air photo whose sites are delineated, and count the percentage
of dots that are over trees. However, because dots are difficult to see against
the tree background, I used triangles, with the lower right corner of the
triangle used as the “dot”. I created the grid in Corel Draw, saved it as a GIF
file, and imported it into ArcMap as a layer.
I used air photos from various years to give a wide time
series. The oldest air photo was from 1937. I adjusted the contrast and
brightness so that the tree images were sharp. Color photos were converted to
B/W.
Previously I had created a GIS layer that had the outlines
of each management unit. Thus, I could determine the canopy cover for any PVC
area. The photo shows the digital grid and management units on top of the 1937 air photo.
A portion of PVC showing the dot overlay of the 1937 air photo. The lower right corner of the triangle was considered to be the "dot". The Unit labels can be turned off when doing the measurements. |
The accuracy of this technique depends on the density of the
digital grid, and the ability to recognize the edge of the tree canopy. Some
air photos were better than others, but all were of sufficient quality for my
purposes.
% canopy coverage
|
|
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Year
|
Vegetation
|
||||
Unit
|
1937
|
1990
|
2005
|
2010
|
|
4
|
0
|
66
|
0
|
0
|
Prairie remnant
|
6
|
43
|
92
|
40
|
40
|
Bur oak savanna
|
8
|
77
|
100
|
57
|
45
|
Bur oak savanna
|
9
|
49
|
88
|
46
|
38
|
Bur oak savanna
|
10
|
54
|
93
|
44
|
46
|
Bur oak savanna
|
11A
|
30
|
97
|
36
|
40
|
Bur oak savanna
|
12A
|
31
|
89
|
28
|
36
|
White oak savanna
|
The drastic change from 1937 to 1990 shows what happens in
the absence of fire. We started clearing the bad stuff in 1998 and by 2005 we
had most of PVC cleared. In most units, the canopy cover is lower in 2005 than
it was in 1937, probably reflecting the extent of our restoration work. As
expected, there is little change between 2005 and 2010.
Another procedure for canopy analysis is on-the-ground vertical photography with a fish-eye lens. This makes it possible to determine the canopy coverage at any site. I used this procedure when I was studying the distribution of purple milkweed, a classic savanna species. Most of the sites where purples were established had about 50% coverage.
An image of a purple milkweed site with a superimposed grid is shown in the photo below.
Vertical image taken with a fish-eye lens. Each grid corner represents a dot". I estimated 55% coverage for this image. |
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