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Showing content with the highest reputation on 01/28/2015 in all areas

  1. It might not be a very good idea to use ArcGIS but somehow we can use this software for tree counting! My method is quite simple: 1. Get a piece of hi-res image from Google Earth 2. Open the image in ArcGIS 3. Make sure toolbar "Image Classification" is checked (turned on). 4. From "Image Classification" toolbar, select "Classification" --> "Iso Cluster Unsupervised Classification" command. 5. Chose "2" for "Number of Classes" in the dialogbox. By doing it, you will have only trees (or something else similar) and non-tree objects in the result. Run it and see the result (below). C'mon, it also shows "Google Earth" trademark on the result (LOL). 6. Now go to ArcGIS ToolBox, select "Conversion" --> "From Raster" --> "Raster to Polygon". In the dialog box, check to "Simplify Polygion (optional)" checkbox. 7. The result is as below 8. Mask the area where you want to count the trees, then count the number of polygons within that mask. Bingo!!!! If you want to do it better, you can do some pre-processing steps for your image. Also, when you have the polygon layer, you can try to simplify the layer again (using Eliminate, Integrate... functions) before counting trees. Enjoy ESRI.
    1 point
  2. look at maxmax website, they do NIR conventions on cameras that can fit on drones. Did a canon compact with them 100%. Try imageJ (free software), run the NDVI settings you will get some data. Or use a blue filter on your camera, you will get usable images for NDVI. I got good data with dessert palms from RGB images in eCognition, but you have o play with the analysis a bit! Having a NIR layer will make life easy for you. Good Luck
    1 point
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