EORC participates in Svalbard vegetation and biomass monitoring workshop

EORC participates in Svalbard vegetation and biomass monitoring workshop

m

December 19, 2025

Recently, EORC researches and partners participated in the SvalbardMonitoring workshop, a four-day event organized by the Norwegian Institute for Nature Research (NINA) in Longyearbyen, Svalbard. The workshop focused on Arctic vegetation and biomass research, with a methodological emphasis on remote sensing as a critical technique to acquire environmental data. Sessions covered long-term vegetation dynamics, phenology and vegetation growth, ecosystem modelling, Arctic greening and browning, field-based monitoring systems, links to herbivorous wildlife ecology, and cryosphere-snow-vegetation interactions.

The workshop allowed exchange on the newest research and developments in the field among participants from various research backgrounds and home institutions, including Aarhus University, Alaska Pacific University, Alfred Wegener Institute (AWI), Austrian Polar Research Institute, Cambridge University, Centre for Ecological Research and Forestry Applications (CREAF), NINA, NORCE, Norwegian Polar Institute, Sheffield University, University Centre in Svalbard (UNIS), University of Eastern Finland, University of Iceland, University of Lapland, University of North Arizona, University of Oslo, University of Tromsø, University of Virginia and University of Würzburg.

EORC researcher Dr. Jakob Schwalb-Willmann presented research on behalf of a team of co-authors from University of Würzburg, the German Aerospace Center (DLR) and UNIS on the potential of UAV-LiDAR-derived cm-resolution snow depth mapping for analysing snow-ecosystem interactions on Svalbard (https://hdl.handle.net/11250/5276447). In his talk, he showed a new snow depth product with a spatial resolution of 2.5 cm and high spatial precision that EORC and UNIS had created and validated this year at two research sites on Svalbard using a LiDAR-equipped Verticle Take-off and Landing (VTOL) UAV. This research has been conducted in close cooperation between our UNIS colleagues Assoc. Prof. Dr. Larissa Beumer and Assoc. Prof. Dr. Simone Lang, and EORC researchers Dr. Mirjana Bevanda, Antonio José Castañeda-Gómez, Elio Rauth and Dr. Jakob Schwalb-Willmann.

EAGLE MSc. student Ronja Seitz presented work from her Master thesis on quantifying plant functional groups and disturbances of Tundra vegetation in the High Arctic using high-resolution UAV time series data, for which she had collected optical UAV data and in situ vegetation data on a weekly basis for a full vegetation period in her research area on Svalbard (https://hdl.handle.net/11250/5276448). Among other results, Ronja showed a UAV-derived multi-temporal vegetation cover classification for her research area. Her work has been jointly supervised by Dr. Mirjana Bevanda (EORC) and Assoc. Prof. Dr. Larissa Beumer (UNIS).

We are thankful for the invitation to the SvalbardMonitoring workshop and are looking forward to continuing our collaborative research efforts at the interface of remote sensing and Arctic ecology/ecosystem research in the coming year!

  

follow us and share it on:

you may also like:

Geometric calibration study of our thermal UAS sensor

Geometric calibration study of our thermal UAS sensor

At the EORC we deploy a range of space-borne and UAS-based sensors for environmental research. While many systems come with established calibration procedures, some of our UAS sensors require dedicated validation and characterization to ensure scientifically reliable...

EORC researchers teaching drone remote sensing at UNIS, Svalbard

EORC researchers teaching drone remote sensing at UNIS, Svalbard

During their current visit to Svalbard, EORC researchers have been teaching UNIS students from all over Europe on how drones can be used for remote sensing in the high Arctic. Invited by our UNIS collaborators Prof. Dr. Simone Lang (UNIS) and Prof. Dr. Eero Rinne...

Upcoming PhD Defense by Sebastian Buchelt on 11th February

Upcoming PhD Defense by Sebastian Buchelt on 11th February

We are happy to announce that our colleague Sebastian Buchelt will defend his PhD thesis "Potential of Synthetic Aperture Radar time series for mapping and monitoring of small-scale periglacial processes in alpine environments" on February 11th at 12 pm at...

Talk by Dr. Philipp on AI at Airbus

Talk by Dr. Philipp on AI at Airbus

Our former EAGLE M.Sc. graduate and EORC PhD graduate Dr. Marius Philipp will give talk about AI, ML and NLP within his current work at Airbus. The talk will take place next Wednesday, 11th of Feb., at 2pm in John-Skilton Str. 4a. It will take place either in seminar...

Urban Earth Observation Lecture: Understanding Cities from Above

Urban Earth Observation Lecture: Understanding Cities from Above

As part of the EAGLE M.Sc. programme, our international students attended this winter term the Urban Earth Observation lecture by EORC professor Hannes Taubenböck. The session offered a comprehensive overview of how remote sensing has evolved into a central tool for...

Share This