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Model performance of tree height-diameter relationships in the central Congo Basin
Authors:Elizabeth Kearsley  Pieter CJ Moonen  Koen Hufkens  Sebastian Doetterl  Janvier Lisingo  Faustin Boyemba Bosela  Pascal Boeckx  Hans Beeckman  Hans Verbeeck
Institution:1.Department of Applied Ecology and Environmental Biology,Ghent University,Ghent,Belgium;2.Department of Applied Analytical and Physical Chemistry,Ghent University,Ghent,Belgium;3.Service of Wood Biology,Royal Museum for Central Africa,Tervuren,Belgium;4.Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences,KU Leuven,Leuven,Belgium;5.Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology,Harvard University,Cambridge,USA;6.Institute of Geography,Augsburg University,Augsburg,Germany;7.Faculté des Sciences,Université de Kisangani,Kisangani,Democratic Republic of the Congo
Abstract:

Key message

Tree heights in the central Congo Basin are overestimated using best-available height-diameter models. These errors are propagated into the estimation of aboveground biomass and canopy height, causing significant bias when used for calibration of remote sensing products in this region.

Context

Tree height-diameter models are important components of estimating aboveground biomass (AGB) and calibrating remote sensing products in tropical forests.

Aims

For a data-poor area of the central Congo Basin, we quantified height-diameter model performance of local, regional and pan-tropical models for their use in estimating AGB and canopy height.

Methods

At three old-growth forest sites, we assessed the bias introduced in height estimation by regional and pan-tropical height-diameter models. We developed an optimal local model with site-level randomizations accounted for by using a mixed-effects modeling approach. We quantified the error propagation of modeled heights for estimating AGB and canopy height.

Results

Regional and pan-tropical height-diameter models produced a significant overestimation in tree height, propagating into significant overestimations of AGB and Lorey’s height. The pan-tropical model accounting for climatic drivers performed better than the regional models. We present a local height-diameter model which produced nonsignificant errors for AGB and canopy height estimations at our study area.

Conclusion

The application of general models at our study area introduced bias in tree height estimations and the derived stand-level variables. Improved delimitation of regions in tropical Africa with similar forest structure is needed to produce models fit for calibrating remote sensing products.
Keywords:
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