Professor
Mark Danson, Dr Mat Disney, Dr Rachel Gaulton, and Professor Crystal Schaaf,
all members of the Terrestrial Laser Scanner International Interest Group
(TLSIIG) have won support from the Royal Society to lead a Theo Murphy
International Scientific Meeting to be held at The Society’s Chicheley Hall in the
UK in February 2017. The meeting will bring together a star line-up of
researchers from around the world to discuss “The terrestrial laser scanning
revolution in forest ecology”. The meeting organizers are from the University
of Salford, UK, University College London, UK, University of Newcastle, UK and University
of Massachusetts Boston, US, and are among the sixteen invited speakers from
Australia, United States, Finland, Netherlands and the UK.
Terrestrial
laser scanners, or TLS for short, provide detailed three-dimensional
measurements of forests, by firing millions of laser pulses up into the canopy. The information recorded can then be used to
monitor changes in forest structure and biomass with unprecedented accuracy. These
measurements are set to revolutionize the way in which ecologists measure
forests, and will help determine whether forests are acting as carbon sinks,
absorbing excess carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, or carbon sources, adding to
the greenhouse effect.
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SALCA range image at Alice Holt, Hampshire |
The meeting
will lead to a Special Themed issue of the Royal Society’s inter-disciplinary
journal Interface Focus, with Professor Danson as lead editor. Professor Danson
said: “This support from the UK’s most eminent scientific society will be a showcase
Salford’s world-leading research in TLS applications in ecology. It will also provide
a forum for developing this research field, along with other key players from
around the world”. The meeting will take place 27-28th February 2017 and the Programme will be released shortly.