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Testing the utility of structure‐from‐motion photogrammetry reconstructions using small unmanned aerial vehicles and ground photography to estimate the extent of upland soil erosion
Authors:Miriam Glendell  Gareth McShane  Luke Farrow  Mike R James  John Quinton  Karen Anderson  Martin Evans  Pia Benaud  Barry Rawlins  David Morgan  Lee Jones  Matthew Kirkham  Leon DeBell  Timothy A Quine  Murray Lark  Jane Rickson  Richard E Brazier
Institution:1. Geography – College of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Exeter, Exeter, UK;2. The James Hutton Institute, Craigiebuckler, Aberdeen, UK;3. Lancaster Environment Centre, Lancaster University, Lancaster, UK;4. Environment and Sustainability Institute, University of Exeter, Penryn, UK;5. School of Environment, Education and Development, The University of Manchester, Manchester, UK;6. British Geological Survey, Environmental Science Centre, Keyworth, UK;7. Environmental Science and Technology Department, Applied Sciences, Cranfield University, Cranfield, UK
Abstract:Quantifying the extent of soil erosion at a fine spatial resolution can be time consuming and costly; however, proximal remote sensing approaches to collect topographic data present an emerging alternative for quantifying soil volumes lost via erosion. Herein we compare terrestrial laser scanning (TLS), and both unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) and ground photography (GP) structure‐from‐motion (SfM) derived topography. We compare the cost‐effectiveness and accuracy of both SfM techniques to TLS for erosion gully surveying in upland landscapes, treating TLS as a benchmark. Further, we quantify volumetric soil loss estimates from upland gullies using digital surface models derived by each technique and subtracted from an interpolated pre‐erosion surface. Soil loss estimates from UAV and GP SfM reconstructions were comparable to those from TLS, whereby the slopes of the relationship between all three techniques were not significantly different from 1:1 line. Only for the TLS to GP comparison was the intercept significantly different from zero, showing that GP is more capable of measuring the volumes of very small erosion features. In terms of cost‐effectiveness in data collection and processing time, both UAV and GP were comparable with the TLS on a per‐site basis (13.4 and 8.2 person‐hours versus 13.4 for TLS); however, GP was less suitable for surveying larger areas (127 person‐hours per ha?1 versus 4.5 for UAV and 3.9 for TLS). Annual repeat surveys using GP were capable of detecting mean vertical erosion change on peaty soils. These first published estimates of whole gully erosion rates (0.077 m a?1) suggest that combined erosion rates on gully floors and walls are around three times the value of previous estimates, which largely characterize wind and rainsplash erosion of gully walls. Copyright © 2017 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Keywords:soil erosion monitoring  SfM photogrammetry  upland gully erosion  lightweight drones  terrestrial laser scanning
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