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Continuous Monitoring of Forests in Wetland Ecosystems with Remote Sensing and Probability Sampling

Remote Sensing 2024 2 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Aoyun Zhao, Aoyun Zhao, Xinjie Cheng, Xinjie Cheng, Rong Cao, Rong Cao, Liuyuan Huang, Liuyuan Huang, Zhengyang Hou

Summary

This paper is not about microplastics; it develops a remote-sensing statistical method for monitoring above-ground biomass in wetland forest areas to improve carbon accounting.

With the drastic reduction in wetland areas, it is essential to conduct an annual monitoring of the biomass or carbon content of wetland ecosystems to support international initiatives and agreements focused on sustainable development, climate change, and carbon equity. Forests in wetland ecosystems play a crucial role in carbon sequestration; however, the monitoring of small, fragmented forest components in wetlands remains insufficient, leading to an underestimation of their ecological and carbon sequestration functions. This study utilizes a model-assisted (MA) estimator, a monitoring procedure that is asymptotically design-unbiased and incorporates remote sensing, to assess the status and trends in the above-ground biomass (AGB) of forest components in wetlands, while also proposing a method of optimizing the sample size to enable continuous monitoring. Based on the population of the forest component of Baiyangdian wetland, major findings indicate that: (1) neglecting the forest component of Baiyangdian wetland will lead to an underestimation of the total aboveground biomass by 224.34 t/ha and 243.64 t/ha in the years 2022 and 2023, respectively; (2) in either year-specific monitoring or interannual change monitoring, the MA estimator is more cost-effective than the expansion estimator, a comparable procedure that relies solely on field observations; (3) the method used to optimize sample size can effectively tackle the cost-related concerns of subsequent continuous monitoring. Overall, the neglect of forest components is inevitably bound to give rise to an underestimation of wetlands, and use of an MA estimator and optimizing the sample size could effectively address the cost issue in continuous monitoring. This holds significant importance when developing management strategies to prevent the further degradation of wetland ecological functions and carbon sink capabilities.

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