TREE-MENDOUS TIMBER EVALUATION
ENVIRONMENT AND RESOURCES MANAGEMENT
ORIGINATING TECHNOLOGY/ NASA CONTRIBUTION
Funded and administered by NASA, the Affiliated
Research Center (ARC) program transfers geospatial
technologies from the Space Agency and participating
universities to commercial companies, non-profit
and trade organizations, and tribal governments.
The origins of the ARC program date back to 1988,
when NASA’s Stennis Space Center initiated the
Visiting Investigator Program to bring industry
closer to spatial information technologies. The
success of this trial program led to an expansion
into the ARC program, whose goal is to enhance
competitiveness of U.S. industries through more
efficient use of remote sensing and related technologies.
NASA’s ARC program served as the foundation for
the development of International Hardwood Resources,
which then grew into Falcon Informatics with the
acquisition of a technology from a European software
company and a change of business models. Doylestown,
Pennsylvania-based Falcon Informatics is now a
world-leading information services company that
combines in-depth timber industry experience with
state-of-the-art software to serve the needs of
national governments, international paper companies,
and timber-investment management organizations.
PARTNERSHIP
In 1997, Adam Rousselle founded International Hardwood
Resources as a log-exporting and consulting company.
Not long after, Rousselle found that it had become
exceedingly difficult to find high-value pockets
of timber (also known as timber “stands”) to supply
his company, so he decided to investigate the possibility
of locating hardwoods through remote sensing. Essentially,
Rousselle was looking to locate and purchase greater
quantities of privately owned standing timber,
because alternative sources—such as buying timber
from auctions or other consultants—were prohibitively
expensive. By locating, identifying, and evaluating
trees through automatic interpretation of remote
images, such as aerial photographs, Rousselle hoped
to reduce the cost of pinpointing timber stands
and increase the amount of cheaper, internally-sourced
timber.
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| Boundaries are corrected by Falcon Informatics’ automated image analysis (before
and after; the blue lines represent the customer’s
boundary lines, established by conventional
surveying techniques, and the red lines represent
Falcon Informatics’ corrected boundary lines). |
As a veteran of the Gulf War with experience in
counter-intelligence, Rousselle was very familiar
with the advances of satellite surveillance and
high-resolution photography. This led him to NASA,
where he learned about opportunities available
through the ARC program. NASA granted him a research
contract to perform a feasibility study to determine
whether there would be potential for his concept
to become commercially viable. The study was carried
out at the School of Environmental Science at the
State University of New York (SUNY), Syracuse,
with guidance from the late Dr. Paul Hopkins, former
director of the ARC program at this institution.
During the research, Rousselle, Hopkins, and the
ARC investigation team utilized Landsat Thematic
Mapper imagery (30-meter ground sample distance)
in a preliminary classification to define hardwood
forest areas in the Allegheny Forest region of
northwestern Pennsylvania. These regions were then
classified to a higher level using Airborne Terrestrial
Applications Sensor imagery (2.5-meter ground sample
distance). Spatial analytical methods resident
within a geographic information system were then
added to the mix to define areas where logging
might have been limited in the past due to the
areas’ high slopes. The remote sensing analyses
were combined in the attempt to highlight areas
that had a higher potential to contain valuable
lumber.
The NASA-supported study at SUNY yielded encouraging
results, showing that International Hardwood Resources
could identify high-value hardwood trees using
remote sensing, while additionally reducing environmental
degradation by decreasing unnecessary logging and
increasing the use of low-impact, selective harvesting
techniques, such as helicopter logging. The company
concluded from this project that it should invest
time and capital in the development of a deductive
logic system that renders an approximate value
of a given timber stand, based on customer needs.
PRODUCT OUTCOME
In developing the logic system, Rousselle identified
a “tremendous” opportunity to expedite the time-consuming
task of manually interpreting the remotely sensed
images. This occurred in June 2001, when Rousselle
visited a Finnish company that developed a software
application to detect individual tree crowns in
aerial photography. The company was willing to
sell the software to him because it had “never
fully leveraged” its capabilities. Rousselle acquired
the software and hired a software team to integrate
it into the system that would be the nucleus of
his revolutionary remote-sensing service. With
the successive hiring of expert foresters and geographic
information system (GIS) pros, Falcon Informatics
was born.
Without ever setting foot in a forest, paper companies,
real estate investors, government agencies, public
forest managers, and many other entities can improve
the accuracy and usability of GIS data through
Falcon Informatics’ services. In combination with
traditional ground-sampling, Falcon Informatics
can rapidly collect a wealth of timber inventory
and management data. The company’s innovative timber
assessment services are based on the Forest Assessment
and Classification Tool (FACT) software that automatically
interprets aerial photography and satellite imagery,
unlike the costly and arduous manual efforts of
old. FACT enables Falcon Informatics to count and
analyze each individual tree—hardwood or softwood—anywhere
in the world. The process begins when the company
flies over a selected geographic area, capturing
a comprehensive, “bird’s-eye” view of the landscape.
FACT then performs an in-depth analysis of the
captured imagery to identify viable timber stands
and measure ground-sampled trees. The data resulting
from this analysis are used to calculate the composition
and volume of timber in the selected area.
Falcon Informatics’ systematic approach eliminates
many opportunities for human error and produces
consistent and reliable results. The company can
even correct existing, manually generated timber
stand boundaries to reflect the correct geographic
position. These services provide instant return
on investment by improving the quality of the timber-management
information, thereby accelerating the ability of
forest managers to optimize growth and yield. Forestry
teams can avoid costly mistakes and concentrate
on improving productivity instead of spending wasteful
hours trying to redefine forests.
“Foresters have studied the relationship between
crown size and volume for a long time,” Rousselle
explains. “However, historically there has been
no way to take advantage of this relationship.
FACT makes this possible by allowing consistent
crown measurements on a larger scale.”
From an environmental standpoint, FACT helps to
define stand-level health statistics, mitigate
the threat of wildfires, and monitor the impact
of insects and disease. Also, the proprietary tool
can identify and document environmentally sensitive
areas like Riparian buffers—areas of forested land
adjacent to a stream, river, marsh, or shoreline
which form the transition between land and water
environments. Riparian buffers play an important
role in maintaining the health of these waters
by improving water quality and providing habitats
for wildlife and fish.
In 2003, Falcon Informatics received contracts
with the U.S. Army’s Fort Benning, Georgia, and
Fort A.P. Hill, Virginia, to deliver timber inventory
and GIS data on over 250,000 acres of military
base forestland, using FACT. The forest resource
manager at Fort Benning was first introduced to
Falcon Informatics’ services in 2002 when Rousselle
spoke to the committee of U.S. Department of Defense
foresters at the Society of American Foresters’
annual convention. “When I saw the work they were
doing in other countries and here in the United
States for several private companies, I was eager
to learn more about how we could take advantage
of it,” the forest resource manager noted, adding
that most people are not aware of how critical
forest health is to the training and preparedness
of U.S. soldiers.
Falcon Informatics has also formed strategic partnerships
with several companies in order to create a larger
pool of certified FACT users. Partners include
Dendron Resource Surveys Inc., one of Canada’s
leading forestry consulting companies, and Emerge,
a subsidiary of ConAgra, Inc., that supplies high-quality,
digital, orthorectified, mosaic imagery products.
The partnerships are focused on worldwide dissemination
of Falcon Informatics’ innovative hardwood and
softwood analysis services.