Remote Sensing of Biodiversity in Tropical Forests
A special issue of Remote Sensing (ISSN 2072-4292). This special issue belongs to the section "Forest Remote Sensing".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (10 July 2021) | Viewed by 8289
Special Issue Editors
Interests: Amazonia; biogeography; ecology; species diversity patterns; understory herbs; ferns
Interests: forest structure; species diversity; environmental gradients; functional plant ecology.
Interests: ecology; remote sensing (LiDAR); biomass; Congo basin; Allometric equations
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Tropical forests contain the richest species communities of the world and are crucial in regulating the global climate and providing ecosystem services. Despite its importance, these forests are also heavily threatened by fire, deforestation, mining, and other human activities.
Tropical forest biodiversity remains poorly understood and mapped. Its vastness and high diversity pose challenges for sampling over representative areas.
Remote sensing data can provide spatially and temporally continuous information useful for biodiversity assessments and significantly improve our understanding of forest dynamics, function, biodiversity distribution, reduce knowledge gaps, and help to identify threats and priority areas for land use planning and conservation of tropical forests.
Increased availability of data from terrestrial, airborne, and satellite sensors and improved analytical methods are allowing a broader range of approaches, from descriptions of spatial patterns and processes to predictions in field-unsampled areas in tropical forest ecosystems. These have applications in mapping biogeographical units, carbon stocks, habitats, species occurrence, functional and chemical variation, tracking animal movement, and monitoring human-driven changes due to land use and effects of climate change.
We thus call on the global tropical forest biodiversity community for contributions of innovative work on remote sensing of tropical forest. We are seeking a broad range of approaches that provide insights in linking field and remote sensing measurements, improving our ability to measure, map, and monitor species, traits, and structural diversity of tropical forests, regardless of the taxonomic focus.
The papers presented in this Special Issue will help to improve scientific-based decisions on tropical forests and expand the general readership of remote sensing and forest research. We thus also encourage authors from tropical countries to contribute.
Dr. Gabriela Zuquim
Dr. Juliana Schietti
Dr. Stéphane Takoudjou Momo
Guest Editors
Manuscript Submission Information
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Keywords
- species distribution
- functional diversity
- upscaling
- ecological patterns and processes
- conservation
- monitoring
- mapping
- sensors
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