WEBVTT FILE 1 00:00:00.000 --> 00:00:01.680 2 00:00:01.700 --> 00:00:05.480 Doug Morton: The forests of Puerto Rico are always changing. 3 00:00:05.500 --> 00:00:08.260 Following Hurricane Maria, they've changed a lot. 4 00:00:08.280 --> 00:00:10.330 But by taking measurements on the ground, 5 00:00:10.350 --> 00:00:12.250 in the air, and from space, 6 00:00:12.270 --> 00:00:14.620 we're able to not only identify those changes, 7 00:00:14.640 --> 00:00:16.340 but also follow them through time 8 00:00:16.360 --> 00:00:18.620 as these landscapes recover the lush tropical forests 9 00:00:18.640 --> 00:00:20.570 they had before the storm. 10 00:00:20.590 --> 00:00:22.410 Narrator: NASA scientists were in Puerto Rico 11 00:00:22.430 --> 00:00:26.720 in early 2017, studying how forests grow and change. 12 00:00:26.740 --> 00:00:29.760 They returned in 2018 to assess the forest recovery 13 00:00:29.780 --> 00:00:32.110 after two hurricanes hit the island. 14 00:00:32.130 --> 00:00:34.440 Doug: In many ways, Hurricane Maria has reset 15 00:00:34.460 --> 00:00:37.480 patches of forest across the island. 16 00:00:37.500 --> 00:00:40.080 Canopy trees normally have a large and 17 00:00:40.100 --> 00:00:42.160 sometimes circular crown allowing them 18 00:00:42.180 --> 00:00:44.490 to spread their leaves, photosynthesize, and 19 00:00:44.510 --> 00:00:46.280 live in the top of the canopy. 20 00:00:46.300 --> 00:00:47.680 Hurricane Maria came through and 21 00:00:47.700 --> 00:00:49.980 ripped off many of those large branches, 22 00:00:50.000 --> 00:00:53.630 leaving individuals standing almost like an individual stem. 23 00:00:53.650 --> 00:00:55.330 What that means is they'll have to regrow 24 00:00:55.350 --> 00:00:58.310 those leaves or give up that space in the canopy 25 00:00:58.330 --> 00:01:02.850 to their neighbors as they regrow beneath them. 26 00:01:02.870 --> 00:01:05.080 Narrator: The team returned to the specific plots 27 00:01:05.100 --> 00:01:06.380 they measured the previous year, 28 00:01:06.400 --> 00:01:09.080 hiking through the thick under brush that had grown 29 00:01:09.100 --> 00:01:13.380 since the hurricane opened up the canopy. 30 00:01:13.400 --> 00:01:18.590 A bit like this, Ian? 31 00:01:18.610 --> 00:01:23.010 32 00:01:23.030 --> 00:01:24.480 Doug: When this large tree fell, 33 00:01:24.500 --> 00:01:26.660 it took out most of its neighbors 34 00:01:26.680 --> 00:01:29.350 and created a large gap in the forest where sunlight 35 00:01:29.370 --> 00:01:31.980 will now reach all the way down to the forest floor. 36 00:01:32.000 --> 00:01:35.870 That will allow new, young trees to grow back in its place. 37 00:01:35.890 --> 00:01:38.320 In contrast, on this side of the plot, 38 00:01:38.340 --> 00:01:41.550 many of the large trees were stripped of their large branches 39 00:01:41.570 --> 00:01:44.250 but they are still standing and most of them will recover 40 00:01:44.270 --> 00:01:49.510 those leaves and grow back into the space they left behind. 41 00:01:49.530 --> 00:01:51.740 Narrator: But with forests covering half of the island, 42 00:01:51.760 --> 00:01:58.872 walking up to every tree was not practical. 43 00:01:58.892 --> 00:02:01.530 44 00:02:01.550 --> 00:02:03.210 Bruce: So, my name is Bruce Cook, 45 00:02:03.230 --> 00:02:05.000 I'm from NASA Goddard Space Flight Center. 46 00:02:05.020 --> 00:02:08.280 I'm here today in Puerto Rico, assessing damage 47 00:02:08.300 --> 00:02:10.700 that was caused by both Hurricanes Irma and Maria. 48 00:02:10.720 --> 00:02:12.940 And we're doing it with this instrument to my right, 49 00:02:12.960 --> 00:02:14.560 which is called G-LiHT. 50 00:02:14.580 --> 00:02:18.350 G-LiHT stands for Goddard's Lidar, Hyperspectral, and Thermal instrument. 51 00:02:18.370 --> 00:02:21.070 And it’s using multiple sensors to actually understand 52 00:02:21.090 --> 00:02:24.890 more about terrestrial ecosystems 53 00:02:24.910 --> 00:02:27.780 Narrator: G-LiHT is installed on a small airplane 54 00:02:27.800 --> 00:02:34.680 and flown at low altitudes to collect lots of measurements in one pass. 55 00:02:34.700 --> 00:02:38.010 Bruce: The lidar is being used to measure changes 56 00:02:38.030 --> 00:02:39.310 in the structure of the forest canopy, 57 00:02:39.330 --> 00:02:42.320 how many branches were lost, how many trees were knocked over, 58 00:02:42.340 --> 00:02:44.760 but we're also using other sensors that measure things 59 00:02:44.780 --> 00:02:48.450 such as how much, or what changes in the amount of sunlight 60 00:02:48.470 --> 00:02:50.380 that's being absorbed by these canopies and 61 00:02:50.400 --> 00:02:54.440 how that's affecting their photosynthesis and growth these days. 62 00:02:54.460 --> 00:02:57.620 Narrator: The lidar sends out five hundred thousand laser pulses 63 00:02:57.640 --> 00:02:59.070 each second and can detect the physical structure of individual trees. 64 00:02:59.090 --> 00:03:03.740 65 00:03:03.760 --> 00:03:05.570 Doug: That laser energy from our lidar system 66 00:03:05.590 --> 00:03:07.520 will intersect the top of the canopy, 67 00:03:07.540 --> 00:03:09.160 smaller branches on the way down, 68 00:03:09.180 --> 00:03:10.880 and all the way down to this understory vegetation on the ground 69 00:03:10.900 --> 00:03:16.430 to help us construct a three-dimensional model of these forests 70 00:03:16.450 --> 00:03:19.190 Narrator: But even though G-LiHT collects several types of data, 71 00:03:19.210 --> 00:03:23.600 it's not enough to fully understand how forests react to changes. 72 00:03:23.620 --> 00:03:27.560 Measurements from the ground level are a necessary complement. 73 00:03:27.580 --> 00:03:29.630 Doug: The same laser technology on G-LiHT 74 00:03:29.650 --> 00:03:31.830 can be put on a tripod on the ground 75 00:03:31.850 --> 00:03:34.410 and make very detailed measurements of individual trees, 76 00:03:34.430 --> 00:03:37.550 the vines and lianas that hang from those trees 77 00:03:37.570 --> 00:03:39.470 as well as the damage that's occurred. 78 00:03:39.490 --> 00:03:41.500 Bruce: This is a partnership and it involves 79 00:03:41.520 --> 00:03:43.730 both the data from the ground, 80 00:03:43.750 --> 00:03:46.190 but also the data from the airborne instrument, 81 00:03:46.210 --> 00:03:48.040 as well as data from the satellite. 82 00:03:48.060 --> 00:03:50.010 So we call this scaling, when we can scale 83 00:03:50.030 --> 00:03:53.010 for ground measurements all the way up to satellites, 84 00:03:53.030 --> 00:03:59.009 and it just helps us understand what is going on from a larger picture. 85 00:03:59.029 --> 00:04:01.270 86 00:04:01.290 --> 00:04:04.080 Doug: By being able to take information about the changes 87 00:04:04.100 --> 00:04:06.600 and the recovery of these landscapes over time, 88 00:04:06.620 --> 00:04:09.500 we're able to connect the changes in the carbon cycle, 89 00:04:09.520 --> 00:04:11.860 the changes in tropical forests and their functioning, 90 00:04:11.880 --> 00:04:14.750 even the changes in the strength and intensity of hurricanes 91 00:04:14.770 --> 00:04:17.630 and understand how those changes observed today 92 00:04:17.650 --> 00:04:20.130 help us understand and predict tomorrow's changes 93 00:04:20.150 --> 00:04:22.840 as well as the imprint of that hurricane 94 00:04:22.860 --> 00:04:25.340 in our atmosphere world-wide. 95 00:04:25.360 --> 00:04:29.040 [ beeping ] 96 00:04:29.060 --> 00:04:31.518