Publications by authors named "P Ploton"

Forest expansion into savanna is a pervasive phenomenon in West and Central Africa, warranting comparative studies under diverse environmental conditions. We collected vegetation data from the woody and grassy components within 73 plots of 0.16 ha distributed along a successional gradient from humid savanna to forest in Central Africa.

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Article Synopsis
  • Accurately mapping tropical forests' aboveground biomass (AGB) is essential for effective carbon emission reduction and understanding the carbon cycle, yet existing maps often show inconsistent estimates.
  • To overcome this issue, the study focuses on creating high-quality reference AGB datasets using field plots and airborne LiDAR data from underrepresented regions in Central Africa and South Asia.
  • These reference maps, with detailed uncertainty information, will help enhance the accuracy of future Earth Observation missions and improve AGB mapping reliability.
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Trees structure the Earth's most biodiverse ecosystem, tropical forests. The vast number of tree species presents a formidable challenge to understanding these forests, including their response to environmental change, as very little is known about most tropical tree species. A focus on the common species may circumvent this challenge.

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Data capturing multiple axes of tree size and shape, such as a tree's stem diameter, height and crown size, underpin a wide range of ecological research-from developing and testing theory on forest structure and dynamics, to estimating forest carbon stocks and their uncertainties, and integrating remote sensing imagery into forest monitoring programmes. However, these data can be surprisingly hard to come by, particularly for certain regions of the world and for specific taxonomic groups, posing a real barrier to progress in these fields. To overcome this challenge, we developed the Tallo database, a collection of 498,838 georeferenced and taxonomically standardized records of individual trees for which stem diameter, height and/or crown radius have been measured.

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In tropical forests, the high proportion of trees showing irregularities at the stem base complicates forest monitoring. For example, in the presence of buttresses, the height of the point of measurement (H ) of the stem diameter (D ) is raised from 1.3 m, the standard breast height, up to a regular part of the stem.

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