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PyCrown - Fast raster-based individual tree segmentation for LiDAR data

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PyCrown - Fast raster-based individual tree segmentation for LiDAR data

Author: Dr Jan Schindler (formerly Zörner) (mailto:[email protected])

Published under GNU GPLv3

Summary

PyCrown is a Python package for identifying tree top positions in a canopy height model (CHM) and delineating individual tree crowns.

The tree top mapping and crown delineation method (optimized with Cython and Numba), uses local maxima in the canopy height model (CHM) as initial tree locations and identifies the correct tree top positions even in steep terrain by combining a raster-based tree crown delineation approach with information from the digital surface model (DSM) and terrain model (DTM).

Citation:

Zörner, J.; Dymond, J.; Shepherd J.; Jolly, B. PyCrown - Fast raster-based individual tree segmentation for LiDAR data. Landcare Research NZ Ltd. 2018, https://doi.org/10.7931/M0SR-DN55

Research Article:

Zörner, J., Dymond, J.R., Shepherd, J.D., Wiser, S.K., Bunting, P., Jolly, B. (2018) Lidar-based regional inventory of tall trees - Wellington, New Zealand. Forests 9, 702-71. https://doi.org/10.3390/f9110702

Purpose and methods

A number of open-source tools to identify tree top locations and delineate tree crowns already exist. The purpose of this package is to provide a fast and flexible Python-based implementation which builds on top of already well-established algorithms.

Tree tops are identified in the first iteration through local maxima in the smoothed CHM.

We re-implement the crown delineation algorithms from Dalponte and Coomes (2016) in Python. The original code was published as R-package itcSegment (https://cran.r-project.org/package=itcSegment) and was further optimized for speed in the lidR R-package (https://cran.r-project.org/package=lidR).

Our Cython and Numba implementations of the original algorithm provide a significant speed-up compared to itcSegment and a moderate improvement over the version available in the lidR package.

We also adapted the crown algorithm slightly to grow in circular fashion around the tree top which gives crown a smoother, more natural looking shape.

We add an additional step to correct for erroneous tree top locations on steep slopes by taking either the high point from the surface model or the centre of mass of the tree crown as new tree top.

Reference:

Dalponte, M. and Coomes, D.A. (2016) Tree-centric mapping of forest carbon density from airborne laser scanning and hyperspectral data. Methods in Ecology and Evolution, 7, 1236-1245.

Main outputs

  • Tree top locations (stored as 3D ESRI .shp-file)
  • Tree crowns (stored as 2D ESRI .shp-file)
  • Individual tree classification of the 3D point cloud (stored as .las-file)

Contributors

  • Dr Jan Zörner (Manaaki Whenua - Landcare Research, Lincoln, New Zealand)
  • Dr John Dymond (Manaaki Whenua - Landcare Research, Palmerston North, New Zealand)
  • Dr James Shepherd (Manaaki Whenua - Landcare Research, Palmerston North, New Zealand)
  • Dr Ben Jolly (Manaaki Whenua - Landcare Research, Palmerston North, New Zealand)

Requirements

It is assumed that you generated a canopy height model (CHM), digital surface model (DSM) and digital terrain model (DTM) from the LiDAR dataset before running PyCrown. If you want to classify individual trees in the point cloud, it is recommended to normalize heights to height above ground elevation (also done externally).

For processing laser scanning data we recommend the open-source software SPDLib (http://www.spdlib.org).

Installation and environment set-up

Python 3.6 is required.

Tested on: Windows 10, Debian 9 (Stretch), Fedora 28, Ubuntu 18.04 & 16.04

Environment set-up

With Conda package manager (recommended)

Create the environment and install all required packages

conda env create

Activate the environment

Windows: activate pycrown-env

Linux: source activate pycrown-env

With Python's venv and pip

Create the environment

python -m venv pycrown-env

Linux: source pycrown-env/bin/activate

Windows: pycrown-env\Scripts\activate.bat

Install all required packages

python -m pip install --upgrade pip

pip install -r requirements.txt

Run Tests

There are only some rudimentary tests provided at the moment, but it is advised to check that everything works:

python setup.py test

Install PyCrown

Build and install the PyCrown module with:

python setup.py install

Common problems

laspy.util.LaspyException: Laszip was not found on the system

On some platforms (e.g. Ubuntu 16.04) the installation of laspy does not include laszip/laszip-cli. See the issue report on github for more infos.

In this case, please follow these steps:

  • wget http://lastools.org/download/LAStools.zip
  • unzip LAStools.zip && cd LAStools && make
  • cp bin/laszip /home/USERNAME/miniconda3/envs/pycrown-env/bin/

If you encounter this error under Windows, please download LAStools.zip, extract the archive and copy the file "laszip.exe" from the "bin"-directory to the conda environment, e.g. C:\Users<username>\AppData\Local\Continuum\miniconda3\envs\pycrown-env\Scripts\ or C:\Users<username>\Miniconda3\envs\pycrown-env\Scripts

Error while building 'pycrown._crown_dalponte_cython' extension

Building the Cython module requires C++ build tools which may need to be installed on your system.

The Windows error message on Windows provides instructions: error: Microsoft Visual C++ 14.0 is required. Get it with "Build Tools for Visual Studio": https://visualstudio.microsoft.com/downloads/ During the setup process, please select 'C++ Build Tools'.

TypeError: a bytes-like object is required, not 'FakeMmap' when trying to load .laz files

There seems to be an incompatibility between laspy and numpy in recent versions. The combination numpy==1.16.4 and laspy==1.5.1 works for me. I suggest either not using .laz files for the time being or downgrading to the appropiate package versions. Please also refer to this github issue: laspy/laspy#112

Getting Started

You can find an IPython Notebook demonstrating each step of the tree segmentation approach in the example folder.

You can also run the example python script directly. Results are stored in the example/result folder.

cd example

python example.py

Main processing steps

Step 1: Smoothing of CHM using a median filter

Step 1

Step 2: Tree top detection using local maxima filter

Step 2

Step 3: Tree Crown Delineation using an adapted Dalponte and Coomes (2016) scheme

Step 3

Step 4: Tree top correction of trees on steep slopes

Step 4

Step 5: Smoothing of crown polygons using first returns of normalized LiDAR point clouds

Step 5

Step 6: Classification of individual trees in the 3D point cloud (visualized with CloudCompare)

Classified Point Cloud Classified Point Cloud

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