CVJan 19

TreeDGS: Aerial Gaussian Splatting for Distant DBH Measurement

arXiv:2601.12823v1
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This enables low-cost, efficient aerial DBH measurement for forestry and environmental monitoring, though it is an incremental improvement over existing 3D reconstruction methods.

The paper tackles the problem of accurately measuring tree diameter at breast height (DBH) from aerial imagery, where trunks are distant and sparsely observed, by introducing TreeDGS, a method based on 3D Gaussian Splatting that achieves 4.79 cm RMSE, outperforming a LiDAR baseline with 7.91 cm RMSE.

Aerial remote sensing enables efficient large-area surveying, but accurate direct object-level measurement remains difficult in complex natural scenes. Recent advancements in 3D vision, particularly learned radiance-field representations such as NeRF and 3D Gaussian Splatting, have begun to raise the ceiling on reconstruction fidelity and densifiable geometry from posed imagery. Nevertheless, direct aerial measurement of important natural attributes such as tree diameter at breast height (DBH) remains challenging. Trunks in aerial forest scans are distant and sparsely observed in image views: at typical operating altitudes, stems may span only a few pixels. With these constraints, conventional reconstruction methods leave breast-height trunk geometry weakly constrained. We present TreeDGS, an aerial image reconstruction method that leverages 3D Gaussian Splatting as a continuous, densifiable scene representation for trunk measurement. After SfM-MVS initialization and Gaussian optimization, we extract a dense point set from the Gaussian field using RaDe-GS's depth-aware cumulative-opacity integration and associate each sample with a multi-view opacity reliability score. We then estimate DBH from trunk-isolated points using opacity-weighted solid-circle fitting. Evaluated on 10 plots with field-measured DBH, TreeDGS reaches 4.79,cm RMSE (about 2.6 pixels at this GSD) and outperforms a state-of-the-art LiDAR baseline (7.91,cm RMSE), demonstrating that densified splat-based geometry can enable accurate, low-cost aerial DBH measurement.

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