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USDA Forest Service Forest Inventory and Analysis. An Assessment of Repeatability for Crown Measurements Taken on Conifer Tree Species James A. Westfall William A. Bechtold KaDonna C. Randolph. FIA QA/QC Data Collection. Hot Checks Cold Checks Blind Checks
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USDA Forest ServiceForest Inventory and Analysis An Assessment of Repeatability for Crown Measurements Taken on Conifer Tree Species James A. Westfall William A. Bechtold KaDonna C. Randolph
FIA QA/QC Data Collection • Hot Checks • Cold Checks • Blind Checks • Independent Plot Remeasurement • Randomly Chosen Plots • Experienced Personnel • Target 3%
Conifer Data • FIA Tree Crown Indicator (Phase 3) • Uncompacted Crown Ratio (nearest 1%) • Light Exposure (6 categories) • Crown Position (4 categories) • Crown Vigor Class (saplings – 3 categories) • Crown Density (nearest 5%) • Dieback (nearest 5%) • Foliage Transparency (nearest 5%)
Analysis • Data Matching (i.e., trees) • No one-to-one correspondence (independent remeasure) • Manually expensive (large # observations) • Automate most matches • 2-pass approach • Weighted distance = f(dbh, horz. distance, azimuth) • ‘Conservatism’ via a decision rule • MUST review unmatched trees and add legitimate matches into analysis data set
Analysis • MQOs and Tolerances • Tolerance • A range of acceptable variation • Can be specific value or percentage • Example: ± 0.1 in. for dbh • Measurement Quality Objective (MQO) • The desired percentage of measurements that fall within the tolerance range • Example: 95% of the time
Analysis • Computations • Obtain differences between field and QA crews for matched observations • Determine percentage of total observations where difference is within the tolerance range • Compare with MQO to see if standard is met • Optional: compute percentages across range of tolerance values
Results *
Conclusion • Crown Light Exposure, Crown Dieback, and Foliage Transparency measurements met the stated repeatability standard. • Uncompacted CR, Crown Position, Crown Vigor, and Crown Density measurements did not meet the repeatability standard.
Conclusion • With few exceptions, levels of repeatability are similar across geographic regions. • The poorest repeatability statistics were generally associated with relatively rarer crown characteristics. • For some variables, improved training and/ or re-evaluation of the tolerance/MQO may be needed.
Conclusion • Quality assurance data are important for: • Evaluating training effectiveness • Employee performance feedback • Evaluating measurement protocols • Identifying significant sources of error for computed attributes, model projections, etc.
Conclusion • Further reading: • Westfall, J.A., ed. 2009. FIA national assessment of data quality for forest health indicators. USDA For. Serv. Gen. Tech. Rep. NRS-53. • Pollard, J.E., et al. 2006. FIA national data quality assessment report for 2000-2003. USDA For. Serv. Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-181.