Gary,

Josh was taking the lead on organizing an article/paper on using Lidar since 
his group has better software tools and access to local data for ground 
verification.   However, the coarser grids that they have chosen to process 
with may be better for determining old growth structure than for picking out 
individual tall trees.  

It looks like it should be fairly reliable for relatively flat areas, may need 
further subjective interpretation for steep areas and areas with surface water. 
 It also has false returns for large flocks of birds and other low flying 
aircraft, for example appearing as 800 foot tall trees!  Filtering maximums by 
realistic tree heights removed most of the false tree height returns.  GPS 
locations provided may be offset from the tree peak due to sloping terrain and 
the size of the data grid, so the location of the data point in the Lidar 
height data might not actually be under the tree crown at all.  At the least, 
it would locate most of the tallest trees in an area for further on site 
investigation.

Their is only a small amount of data available for Wisconsin for a small 
section of distant north-central Wisconsin that has no tall trees.  There is 
limited coverage of bits of Illinois with tall trees but too far to get to with 
my current schedule. I hope to check it out this winter.  

There is total free state Lidar coverage of point cloud data, not just useless, 
filtered, bare earth surface data, for all of North Carolina.  A convenient 
source for much the US is at http://lidar.cr.usgs.gov/LIDAR_Viewer//viewer.php 
.  

I did a survey of state government GIS web sites across the country in March 
when I had some spare time to find the availability of data in the U.S.  North 
Carolina had the best data availability at that time.  Other states had or 
stated that they would soon have partial or complete data online: California, 
Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, Minnesota, Ohio, Oregon, 
Washington, and West Virginia.  States that had data available by request only 
were Delaware and Mississippi.  Some states had data available only for a large 
fee - Maryland, Pennsylvania, and Texas.

The free Fusion tools on the internet work fairly well, but the latest version 
of the data viewer appears to be buggy on my PC, so I use one rev back.  
http://forsys.cfr.washington.edu/fusion/fusionlatest.html

When I have a little more time, I'll provide some basic quick start / getting 
started instructions on how to use it in another post...

Paul Jost


  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Gary A Beluzo 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Sunday, November 15, 2009 8:59 AM
  Subject: Re: [ENTS] A Large Tree article in 1849


  Paul,


  How is the LIDAR work going?

  Gary

  On Nov 15, 2009, at 9:54 AM, Paul Jost <[email protected]> wrote:


    That's why I think that it may have been a 150'+ double which would be 
realistic and would provide total cut log lengths of about twice the height....

    PJ
      ----- Original Message ----- 
      From: Gary A Beluzo 
      To: [email protected] 
      Sent: Sunday, November 15, 2009 8:43 AM
      Subject: Re: [ENTS] A Large Tree article in 1849


      I concur when you aver!

      Gary

      On Nov 14, 2009, at 10:00 PM, Bob <[email protected]> wrote:


        Ed, Tim, Gary, Don, et al,


             White pines that rise significantly above the surrounding canopy 
are at extra risk from wind events. So our mythical 300-hundred footer would 
have had to be in an area that received plenty of protection from the wind. 
Additionally, it would have needed to be in an area that possesses the right 
kind of soil for tall white pines (sand-silt), receives sufficient moisture, 
etc. But even if these conditions were met, what would be the incentive for a 
pine to continue growing to eventually reach such an improbable height? 
Competition? White pines reach their greatest heights in stands (with rare 
exceptions). So our mythical pine would have likely had company. The 300-footer 
would have had 250-footer companions. The scenario becomes wildly improbable.


        Bob 


                
        Sent from my iPhone

        On Nov 14, 2009, at 6:26 PM, "Edward Frank" <[email protected]> wrote:


          Tim,

          I always enjoy reading these historical accounts, whether they are 
deemed accurate or not.  If you come across more, please post them to the list. 
 I like the response regarding genetics as well.  I must comment however when 
he talks about some variations have no specific benefit.  Well - there might be 
some examples, but looking at things from the perspective of paleontology, 
there are very few genetic variations that do not have some adaptive purpose 
and if they have an adaptive purpose, then they are selected for or against.  
Things that might not have a "purpose,"  if I were to postulate that left or 
right handedness did not have a purpose, then the degree of variation between 
the two variable opposites tend to be minimal so that selection would not 
prefer one to the other.  

          Tree height has a very distinct purpose and is selected for dependant 
on the particular environmental conditions.  Therefore the height parameter  in 
one area of the range is different than in other areas of the range.   Trees in 
that portion of the range fall within the heights genetically selected for in 
that region.  In other cases the genes for a variety of different conditions 
are all present and environmental conditions turn one set of genes on and 
another off, dependant on conditions.  An example is a fish in some Mexican 
caves.  When found in darkness in the depths of the caves, they do not grow 
eyes, while the same species in surface pools do grow eyes.  Parent that are 
eyeless will spawn eyed fish if moved to the light, and eyed parents will spawn 
eyeless fish if they are moved to the dark.  I don't believe that there is 
enough variation in genetic height potential to grow a 300 foot tall tree in 
New England.  

          The other consideration is one of environmental conditions.  Overall 
tree heights seem to correlate with latitude, taller trees are more southerly 
and shorter trees are found more northerly.  I wonder also about weather 
conditions.  The tops of many of the taller trees do not seem to be stopped by 
reaching a growth limit, but rather a point at which the rate of breakage under 
the weather/climatic conditions equal the rate of growth.  This is especially 
true once the trees emerge from the generalized canopy height.  So perhaps tree 
height is not only limited by their own genetics, but limited indirectly by the 
genetics of the trees with which they share the forest.  A tree growing among 
taller species may grow higher than a tree growing among shorter species.  
Anybody have any comments? [If so maybe we should start a new subject]

          Ed Frank



          Check out my new Blog:  http://nature-web-network.blogspot.com/ (and 
click on some of the ads)

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  To unsubscribe send email to [email protected]

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