TY - JOUR
T1 - Spaceborne Canopy Height Products Should Be Complemented With Airborne Laser Scanning Data
T2 - Toward a European Canopy Height Model
AU - Moudrý, Vítězslav
AU - Remelgado, Ruben
AU - Forkel, Matthias
AU - Torresani, Michele
AU - Laurin, Gaia Vaglio
AU - Šárovcová, Eliška
AU - Garcia Millan, Virginia E.
AU - Fischer, Fabian Jörg
AU - Jucker, Tommaso
AU - Gallay, Michal
AU - Kacic, Patrick
AU - Hakkenberg, Christopher R.
AU - Kokalj, Žiga
AU - Stereńczak, Krzysztof
AU - Erfanifard, Yousef
AU - Rocchini, Duccio
AU - Prošek, Jiří
AU - Roilo, Stephanie
AU - Gdulová, Kateřina
AU - Cord, Anna F.
AU - Perrone, Michela
AU - Molina‐Valero, Juan Alberto
AU - Šmída, Jiří
AU - Surový, Peter
AU - Melichová, Zlatica
AU - Malavasi, Marco
AU - Urban, Rudolf
AU - Štroner, Martin
AU - Seidel, Dominik
AU - Szabó, Szilárd
AU - Bertalan, László
AU - Eltner, Anette
AU - Cazzolla Gatti, Roberto
AU - Kaňuk, Ján
AU - Barták, Vojtěch
AU - Franke, Daniel
AU - Brede, Benjamin
AU - Song, Qian
AU - Urbazaev, Mikhail
AU - Kissling, W. Daniel
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2026. The Author(s).
PY - 2026/1/7
Y1 - 2026/1/7
N2 - Measuring and mapping vegetation structure is essential for understanding the functioning of terrestrial ecosystems and for informing environmental policies. Recent years have seen a growing demand for high-resolution data on vegetation structure, driving their prediction at fine resolutions (1–30 m) at state, continental, and global spatial extents by combining satellite data with machine learning. As these initiatives expand, it is crucial to actively discuss the quality and usability of these products. Here, we briefly summarize current efforts to map vegetation structure and show that continental-to-global canopy height models (CHMs) exhibit significant errors in canopy heights compared to national airborne laser scanning (ALS) data. We recommend that regions with abundant ALS data, such as Europe, prioritize using ALS-based canopy height metrics rather than relying on less accurate predictions from satellite products. Despite variations in ALS data characteristics, such as temporal inconsistencies and differences in acquisition characteristics and classification accuracy, the generation of spatially contiguous canopy height products in raster format at fine spatial resolution is necessary and feasible. This requires coordinating efforts for data and survey harmonization, developing standardized processing pipelines and continent-wide ALS products, and ensuring free access for research and environmental policy. We show that ALS data now cover most of Europe, with newer surveys achieving higher point densities, improving their suitability for vegetation mapping. Beyond numerous applications in forestry, ecology, and conservation, such data sets are crucial for calibrating future Earth Observation missions, making them essential for producing reliable and accurate global, fine-resolution vegetation structure data.
AB - Measuring and mapping vegetation structure is essential for understanding the functioning of terrestrial ecosystems and for informing environmental policies. Recent years have seen a growing demand for high-resolution data on vegetation structure, driving their prediction at fine resolutions (1–30 m) at state, continental, and global spatial extents by combining satellite data with machine learning. As these initiatives expand, it is crucial to actively discuss the quality and usability of these products. Here, we briefly summarize current efforts to map vegetation structure and show that continental-to-global canopy height models (CHMs) exhibit significant errors in canopy heights compared to national airborne laser scanning (ALS) data. We recommend that regions with abundant ALS data, such as Europe, prioritize using ALS-based canopy height metrics rather than relying on less accurate predictions from satellite products. Despite variations in ALS data characteristics, such as temporal inconsistencies and differences in acquisition characteristics and classification accuracy, the generation of spatially contiguous canopy height products in raster format at fine spatial resolution is necessary and feasible. This requires coordinating efforts for data and survey harmonization, developing standardized processing pipelines and continent-wide ALS products, and ensuring free access for research and environmental policy. We show that ALS data now cover most of Europe, with newer surveys achieving higher point densities, improving their suitability for vegetation mapping. Beyond numerous applications in forestry, ecology, and conservation, such data sets are crucial for calibrating future Earth Observation missions, making them essential for producing reliable and accurate global, fine-resolution vegetation structure data.
KW - LiDAR
KW - validation
KW - vegetation structure
KW - habitat condition
KW - canopy height
KW - Earth observation
U2 - 10.1029/2025ea004544
DO - 10.1029/2025ea004544
M3 - Article (Academic Journal)
SN - 2333-5084
VL - 13
JO - Earth and Space Science
JF - Earth and Space Science
IS - 1
M1 - e2025EA004544
ER -