No Cover Image

Journal article 1297 views 136 downloads

Vegetation height and cover fraction between 60° S and 60° N from ICESat GLAS data

S. O Los, J. A. B Rosette, N Kljun, P. R. J North, L Chasmer, J. C Suárez, C Hopkinson, R. A Hill, E. van Gorsel, C Mahoney, J. A. J Berni, Peter North Orcid Logo, Sietse Los, Jacqueline Rosette Orcid Logo, Natascha Kljun Orcid Logo

Geoscientific Model Development, Volume: 5, Pages: 413 - 432

Swansea University Authors: Peter North Orcid Logo, Sietse Los, Jacqueline Rosette Orcid Logo, Natascha Kljun Orcid Logo

  • 13916.pdf

    PDF | Version of Record

    Distributed under the terms of a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial (CC-BY-3.0)

    Download (1.86MB)

Check full text

DOI (Published version): 10.5194/gmd-5-413-2012

Abstract

First paper to provide an estimate of vegetation height from a satellite based laser instrument for the entire land surface between 60 S and 60 N. The data can be used in climate models and ecological models to calculate the atmospheric turbulence, biomass and carbon stored in vegetation. The curren...

Full description

Published in: Geoscientific Model Development
ISSN: 1991-9603
Published: 2012
Online Access: Check full text

URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa13916
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Abstract: First paper to provide an estimate of vegetation height from a satellite based laser instrument for the entire land surface between 60 S and 60 N. The data can be used in climate models and ecological models to calculate the atmospheric turbulence, biomass and carbon stored in vegetation. The current dataset is a vast improvement over older specifications that provide an average estimate of vegetation height per land-cover class and have much less spatial detail and other recent data sets that show vegetation height for trees only. Compared to the latter, estimates in the present paper are more realistic
College: Faculty of Science and Engineering
Start Page: 413
End Page: 432