Article

Editorial for the Special Issue "SAR for Forest Mapping II"

Details

Citation

Martone M & Marino A (2023) Editorial for the Special Issue "SAR for Forest Mapping II". Remote Sensing, 15 (18), p. 4376. https://doi.org/10.3390/rs15184376

Abstract
First Paragraph: As vital natural resources, forests are of extreme importance for all living beings on our planet. They play a key role in controlling climate change; represent essential sources of energy (e.g., biomass), food, jobs, and livelihoods; and serve as a natural habitat to a large variety of animal species, which is essential for biodiversity preservation. Forest ecosystems are constantly shaped and changed by physical and biological disturbances, and eventual regeneration processes. As an example, forest degradation is currently occurring at an alarming rate, and it often occurs due to illegal anthropogenic activities such as logging and fires. Sensitive environments have been irreversibly damaged, with critical environmental and economic consequences at regional as well as global scales. Precise and efficient assessment and monitoring of forest resources, treatments, and recreational opportunities are therefore of crucial importance in order to develop early warning systems. In this scenario, synthetic aperture radar (SAR) remote sensing represents a unique technique to provide high-resolution images independently of daylight and in almost any weather conditions. In the past few decades, SAR imaging has demonstrated its suitability for forest mapping applications. The combination of polarimetric, interferometric, and/or tomographic information further increases its capabilities and its products’ accuracy.

Keywords
General Earth and Planetary Sciences

Journal
Remote Sensing: Volume 15, Issue 18

StatusPublished
Publication date31/12/2023
Publication date online30/09/2023
Date accepted by journal28/08/2023
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/35467
PublisherMDPI AG

People (1)

People

Dr Armando Marino

Dr Armando Marino

Associate Professor, Biological and Environmental Sciences