An Article from PLoS: Kite Aerial Photography for Low-Cost, Ultra-high Spatial Resolution Multi-Spectral Mapping of Intertidal Landscapes

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Will

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Mar 15, 2014, 1:43:28 PM3/15/14
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Will has sent you an open-access article from PLOS ONE.

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Interesting journal article featuring near infrared photography, kite mapping with a Delta kite, structure from motion, and image processing methods. Thought the group would find this interesting. Geotiff's available: http://www-personal.acfr.usyd.edu.au/m.bryson/bryson_etal_2013.html I am going to make a little Mapknitter map to show my appreciation. And I need to write a research note about mapping at Great Neck, Pavilion Beach, & Little Neck, Ipswich, MA.

Read the open-access, full-text article here:
http://dx.plos.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0073550

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Kite Aerial Photography for Low-Cost, Ultra-high Spatial Resolution Multi-Spectral Mapping of Intertidal Landscapes

Abstract:

Intertidal ecosystems have primarily been studied using field-based sampling; remote sensing offers the ability to collect data over large areas in a snapshot of time that could complement field-based sampling methods by extrapolating them into the wider spatial and temporal context. Conventional remote sensing tools (such as satellite and aircraft imaging) provide data at limited spatial and temporal resolutions and relatively high costs for small-scale environmental science and ecologically-focussed studies. In this paper, we describe a low-cost, kite-based imaging system and photogrammetric/mapping procedure that was developed for constructing high-resolution, three-dimensional, multi-spectral terrain models of intertidal rocky shores. The processing procedure uses automatic image feature detection and matching, structure-from-motion and photo-textured terrain surface reconstruction algorithms that require minimal human input and only a small number of ground control points and allow the use of cheap, consumer-grade digital cameras. The resulting maps combine imagery at visible and near-infrared wavelengths and topographic information at sub-centimeter resolutions over an intertidal shoreline 200 m long, thus enabling spatial properties of the intertidal environment to be determined across a hierarchy of spatial scales. Results of the system are presented for an intertidal rocky shore at Jervis Bay, New South Wales, Australia. Potential uses of this technique include mapping of plant (micro- and macro-algae) and animal (e.g. gastropods) assemblages at multiple spatial and temporal scales.

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