Extracting cross sections and water levels of vegetated ditches from LiDAR point clouds
Author(s) -
Jennifer Roelens,
Stefaan Dondeyne,
Jos Van Orshoven,
Jan Diels
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
international journal of applied earth observation and geoinformation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.623
H-Index - 98
eISSN - 1872-826X
pISSN - 1569-8432
DOI - 10.1016/j.jag.2016.08.003
Subject(s) - ditch , point cloud , lidar , remote sensing , vegetation (pathology) , geography , environmental science , point (geometry) , hydrology (agriculture) , geology , mathematics , geometry , computer science , geotechnical engineering , medicine , ecology , pathology , computer vision , biology
The hydrologic response of a catchment is sensitive to the morphology of the drainage network. Dimensions of bigger channels are usually well known, however, geometrical data for man-made ditches is often missing as there are many and small. Aerial LiDAR data offers the possibility to extract these small geometrical features. Analysing the three-dimensional point clouds directly will maintain the highest degree of information. A longitudinal and cross-sectional buffer were used to extract the cross-sectional profile points from the LiDAR point cloud. The profile was represented by spline functions fitted through the minimum envelop of the extracted points. The cross-sectional ditch profiles were classified for the presence of water and vegetation based on the normalized difference water index and the spatial characteristics of the points along the profile. The normalized difference water index was created using the RGB and intensity data coupled to the LiDAR points. The mean vertical deviation of 0.14 m found between the extracted and reference cross sections could mainly be attributed to the occurrence of water and partly to vegetation on the banks. In contrast to the cross-sectional area, the extracted width was not influenced by the environment (coefficient of determination R2 = 0.87). Water and vegetation influenced the extracted ditch characteristics, but the proposed method is still robust and therefore facilitates input data acquisition and improves accuracy of spatially explicit hydrological models.status: publishe
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