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Title

UAV-Supported Forest Regeneration: Current Trends, Challenges and Implications.

Authors

Mohan, Midhun; Richardson, Gabriella; Gopan, Gopika; Aghai, Matthew Mehdi; Bajaj, Shaurya; Galgamuwa, G. A. Pabodha; Vastaranta, Mikko; Arachchige, Pavithra S. Pitumpe; Amorós, Lot; Corte, Ana Paula Dalla; de-Miguel, Sergio; Leite, Rodrigo Vieira; Kganyago, Mahlatse; Broadbent, Eben North; Doaemo, Willie; Shorab, Mohammed Abdullah Bin; Cardil, Adrian

Abstract

Replanting trees helps with avoiding desertification, reducing the chances of soil erosion and flooding, minimizing the risks of zoonotic disease outbreaks, and providing ecosystem services and livelihood to the indigenous people, in addition to sequestering carbon dioxide for mitigating climate change. Consequently, it is important to explore new methods and technologies that are aiming to upscale and fast-track afforestation and reforestation (A/R) endeavors, given that many of the current tree planting strategies are not cost effective over large landscapes, and suffer from constraints associated with time, energy, manpower, and nursery-based seedling production. UAV (unmanned aerial vehicle)-supported seed sowing (UAVsSS) can promote rapid A/R in a safe, cost-effective, fast and environmentally friendly manner, if performed correctly, even in otherwise unsafe and/or inaccessible terrains, supplementing the overall manual planting efforts globally. In this study, we reviewed the recent literature on UAVsSS, to analyze the current status of the technology. Primary UAVsSS applications were found to be in areas of post-wildfire reforestation, mangrove restoration, forest restoration after degradation, weed eradication, and desert greening. Nonetheless, low survival rates of the seeds, future forest diversity, weather limitations, financial constraints, and seed-firing accuracy concerns were determined as major challenges to operationalization. Based on our literature survey and qualitative analysis, twelve recommendations—ranging from the need for publishing germination results to linking UAVsSS operations with carbon offset markets—are provided for the advancement of UAVsSS applications.

Subjects

FOREST regeneration; TREE planting; FOREST restoration; REFORESTATION; SURVIVAL rate; WEEDS; TERRAIN mapping

Publication

Remote Sensing, 2021, Vol 13, Issue 13, p2596

ISSN

2072-4292

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.3390/rs13132596

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