Estimates of forest canopy cover are widely used in forest research and management, yet methods used to quantify canopy cover and the estimates they provide vary greatly. Four ground-based techniques for estimating overstory cover -line- intercept, spherical densiometer, moosehorn, and hemispherical photography-and cover estimates generated using the Forest Vegetation Simulator (FVS) were compared in five Douglas- fir/western hemlock structure types in western Oregon. Differences in cover estimates among the ground-based methods did not depend on the structure type in which they were measured (p=0.33). As expected, estimates of cover increased and within-stand variability decreased with increasing angle of view among techniques. However, the moosehorn provided the most conservative estimates of vertical-projection overstory cover. The FVS-generated cover was consistently lower (by up to 44%, 17% on average) than the ground-based estimates and is not advised as a substitute for ground-based measures in these forest types. Regression equations are provided to allow conversion among canopy cover estimates developed with the four ground-based methods.
Andrew N. Gray, Anne C.S. Fiala McIntosh, Steven L. Garman
To compare four ground-based techniques for estimating forest overstory cover -line-intercept, spherical densiometer, moosehorn, and hemispherical photography-and cover estimates generated using the Forest Vegetation Simulator (FVS) in five Douglas-fir/western hemlock structure types in western Oregon.
