Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10174/42064

Title: Using GEDI‑derived vegetation structural metrics to evaluate avian biodiversity patterns in Mediterranean habitats
Authors: Valerio, Francesco
Pereira, Pedro
Pedro, Salgueiro
Godinho, Carlos
Lourenço, Rui
Silva, João Paulo
Gameiro, João
Santana, Joana
Leitão, Pedro
Moreira, Francisco
Lousa, Hugo
Catry, Inês
Reino, Luis
Safara, Jorge
Pedroso, Rui
Venâncio, Luis
Martins, Ricardo
Morgado, Rui
Marques, Ana
Burfin, Thomas
Guise, Inês
Oliveira, André
Neiva, Sara
Faria, João
Crispim-Mendes, Tiago
Corado, Leonel
Basile, Marco
Godinho, Sérgio
Editors: Gonzálvez, Pablo
Guerra-Hernández, Juan
Ferreiro, Eduardo
Keywords: Birds distribution
Space-borne LiDAR
Remote Sensing
Vegetation Structure
Issue Date: 5-Dec-2025
Publisher: Chapter 20 - Using GEDI‑derived vegetation structural metrics to evaluate avian biodiversity patterns in Mediterranean habitats
Citation: Francesco Valerio, Pedro Pereira, Pedro Salgueiro, Carlos Godinho, Rui Lourenço, João Paulo Silva, João Gameiro, Joana Santana, Pedro J. Leitão, Francisco Moreira, Hugo Lousa, Inês Catry, Luís Reino, Jorge Safara, Rui Pedroso, Luís Venâncio, Ricardo C. Martins, Rui Morgado, Ana T. Marques, Thomas Burfin, Inês Guise, André Oliveira, Sara Neiva, João Faria, Tiago Crispim-Mendes, Leonel Corado, Marco Basile, Sérgio Godinho, Chapter 20 - Using GEDI‑derived vegetation structural metrics to evaluate avian biodiversity patterns in Mediterranean habitats. Editor(s): Pablo Rodríguez Gonzálvez, Juan Guerra-Hernández, Eduardo Manuel González Ferreiro. In Earth Observation, Satellite Remote Sensing for Forest and Environmental Monitoring. Elsevier, 2026, Pages 631-661, ISBN 780443402968.
Abstract: Avian communities are highly sensitive to variations in vegetation structure, which in turn is strongly influenced by fine-scale habitat heterogeneity. Traditional categorical land-cover maps often fail to capture this heterogeneity, limiting our ability to monitor avian biodiversity across broad extents. To address this, we present a remote-sensing framework that integrates spaceborne light detection and ranging (LiDAR) metrics from the Global Ecosystem Dynamics Investigation (GEDI) with Sentinel‑1 radar and Sentinel‑2 multispectral data to generate vertical and horizontal vegetation structure encompassing biodiversity-rich environments. Our study covers three areas with contrasting Mediterranean habitats in southern Portugal—woodland, open woodland, and grasslands—where breeding birds were surveyed between 2020 and 2024. We used random forests models to evaluate the ability of GEDI‑derived standard metrics (RH75, RH95, PAI, FHD, AGBD) and structural heterogeneity metrics (Shannon entropy, Rao’s Q), to predict avian species richness and abundance along the woodland-grassland habitat gradient. We then developed a targeted model for an intermediate open woodland landscape (montado), using the tawny owl (Strix aluco) as a model species, to evaluate how those same predictors explain local abundance patterns. Finally, we included common aggregation methods (e.g., mean, maximum) for each metric in the analysis, as well as the effect of scale (75 and 225 m) at the plot level where bird surveys were conducted. This study demonstrated that GEDI-derived upper canopy heterogeneity (Rao’s Q of RH75 at 225 m), aboveground biomass, and canopy density together explained over 70% of the variation in avian species richness and total abundance. Grasslands, despite the lower overall densities, supported key specialists such as the little bustard (Tetrax tetrax), underscoring their essential role alongside structurally rich wood pastures. Although the random forests model for the tawny owl accounted for a smaller share of variance, it revealed a significant positive response to canopy height and a bimodal relationship with foliage height diversity (FHD). Together, these findings emphasize that Mediterranean bird communities depend upon a mosaic of habitat structures, such as layered woodlands with canopy gaps and understory clusters providing nesting, roosting, and foraging niches, while open terrains sustain species adapted to sparse cover. By integrating spaceborne LiDAR from GEDI with Sentinel‑1 radar and Sentinel‑2 optical data, our framework offers a scalable, fine‑grained approach for biodiversity monitoring across Mediterranean landscapes that are overlooked for such applications. We recommend that conservation strategies maintain both three-dimensional woodland complexity and retain extensive grassland habitats to support flagship species. Future work linking GEDI metrics with detailed ground-based microhabitat surveys and avifaunal monitoring will be crucial for pinpointing the structural drivers of species distributions and refining management practices to maximize both richness and abundance.
URI: https://doi.org/10.1016/B978-0-443-40296-8.00008-2
http://hdl.handle.net/10174/42064
Type: bookPart
Appears in Collections:MED - Publicações - Capítulos de Livros

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