Precision Elevation Data for Forest Giants: LiDAR vs ETH Global Canopy Height in Mata do Buçaco (Portugal)

High‑resolution elevation data underpins almost every spatial analysis we do in GIS—especially in forests where vertical structure defines habitat, biomass, wind exposure, fire behavior, hydrology, and the microclimates that sustain rare species. In rugged or densely vegetated environments, a coarse or biased elevation model propagates error everywhere: orthorectification drifts, hillshades mislead, slope/aspect misclassify, and canopy metrics saturate. The result is decisions made on blurred terrain that hides the very patterns we seek to manage. Precision elevation—derived from airborne LiDAR (Light Detection and Ranging)—solves this by separating the ground from the vegetation and delivering both a bare‑earth Digital Terrain Model (DTM) and a Digital Surface Model (DSM). Subtracting DTM from DSM gives a Canopy Height Model (DHM) that captures the true vertical architecture of the forest at sub‑meter resolution.

¡Al final se nos quema la península este 2025!

Este agosto, España y Portugal han vivido una temporada de incendios excepcionalmente dura. En España, las llamas han calcinado ~382.000 hectáreas (más de seis veces la media reciente) y han dejado víctimas mortales; en Portugal, las superficies quemadas superan las 200.000 hectáreas, muy por encima del promedio 2006–2024 para estas fechas. El humo cruzó fronteras y degradó la calidad del aire a cientos de kilómetros.