2017
DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2017.00887
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Timing Is Important: Unmanned Aircraft vs. Satellite Imagery in Plant Invasion Monitoring

Abstract: The rapid spread of invasive plants makes their management increasingly difficult. Remote sensing offers a means of fast and efficient monitoring, but still the optimal methodologies remain to be defined. The seasonal dynamics and spectral characteristics of the target invasive species are important factors, since, at certain time of the vegetation season (e.g., at flowering or senescing), plants are often more distinct (or more visible beneath the canopy). Our aim was to establish fast, repeatable and a cost-… Show more

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Cited by 127 publications
(152 citation statements)
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“…UAS represent a promising option enabling timely, fast, and precise monitoring that is important for many plant species, particularly those that are invasive [122][123][124]. Flexibility of the data acquisition enabled by the UAS is very important, since plants are often more distinct from the surrounding vegetation in certain times of their growing season [125]. Besides rapid monitoring of newly invaded areas, the UAS methodology enables prediction/modelling of invasion spread that can be driven by a combination of factors, such as habitat and species characteristics, human dispersal, and disturbances [126].…”
Section: Monitoring Of Natural Ecosystemsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…UAS represent a promising option enabling timely, fast, and precise monitoring that is important for many plant species, particularly those that are invasive [122][123][124]. Flexibility of the data acquisition enabled by the UAS is very important, since plants are often more distinct from the surrounding vegetation in certain times of their growing season [125]. Besides rapid monitoring of newly invaded areas, the UAS methodology enables prediction/modelling of invasion spread that can be driven by a combination of factors, such as habitat and species characteristics, human dispersal, and disturbances [126].…”
Section: Monitoring Of Natural Ecosystemsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The luxuriant growth as extensive monospecific stands, greater amount of biomass and rapid spread through unique functional traits enable the IAPS to dominate the community. These ecological attributes, differentiating the IAPS from natives is exploited through remote sensing and GIS (Mullerova et al, 2017). Therefore, the incorporation of functional/eco-physiological IAPS traits in spectral/spatial mapping tools can explicitly differentiate them from native plants (Niphadkar and Nagendra, 2016).…”
Section: Geospatial Technologies In Mapping Monitoring and Managemenmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Multi-scale remote sensing tools effectively assist in invasion suitability mapping and sustainability of management practices. For example, through remote sensing, we can assess the possible return of IAPS on eradicated sites, thus judge the efficacy of this management practice (Mullerova et al, 2017). Land suitability and ecosystem process models are being used in conjunction with the geospatial tools for managing the IAPS (He et al, 2015;Walsh, 2018).…”
Section: Geospatial Technologies In Mapping Monitoring and Managemenmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the context of cost-effectiveness [1], the presented methodology can be easily implemented within a reasonable overall cost by using accessible off-the-shelf products. For obtaining preliminary phenological information, a consumer-grade digital camera with no NIR capabilities is sufficient (see Figure 8) [61,70,118,119]; drones and other available fixed wing UAVs have been proven to be a suitable tool for collecting repetitive high-quality overhead imagery [6,34,35,120]; while open source free GIS software's (Geographic Information Systems; e.g., QGIS and R) includ sufficient image processing tools.…”
Section: Near-surface Phenological Observations and Sequential Uav Rementioning
confidence: 99%