alt

About

Led by Songlin Fei, professor and the Dean’s Remote Sensing Chair, the Institute for Digital Forestry at Purdue University is leveraging digital technology and multidisciplinary expertise to measure, monitor and manage urban and rural forests to maximize social, economic and ecological benefits.

Our multidisciplinary research team is developing digital platforms and strategies that will revolutionize forestry and build a globally competitive next generation workforce for the information age.

The team is working to harmonize four key components of digital age technology – Internet of Things (IoT), Big Data, Artificial Intelligence (AI), Edge and Cloud Computing – to advance the following thrusts:

  • AI-assisted tree inventory with multi-platform and multi-scale remote sensing data
  • IoT, Big Data, and Edge and Cloud Computing enabled precision forest management and optimization
  • Large-scale forest health (fire, disease, disturbance) monitoring and mitigation
  • Digital technology savvy interdisciplinary workforce education (undergraduate & graduate)

 


IMPACT

Forests support more than 11 million jobs (many in rural America) and contribute more than 77 billion dollars in timber-based products across the U.S. economy.  The hardwood industry has an economic impact of more than $10 billion and supports more than 70,000 jobs in Indiana.

Forests also provide vital ecosystem services, including flood control, carbon sequestration, nutrient management and recreational amenities. Advancing digital forestry can also lead to:

  • Improved data and tools for management decisions and policy making
  • Enhanced forest sustainability
  • Forest risk reduction and mitigation
  • Sustainable employment in rural America
  • Educated workforce for the information age

 


TAKING THE LEAD

As part of Purdue’s Next Moves, Plant Sciences 2.0 includes investments in digital forestry, creating enhanced research opportunities to revolutionize forestry into the digital age.

Plant Sciences 2.0 leverages and expands Purdue Agriculture’s expertise in digital agriculture, phenotyping and agricultural economics to add value to plants and forest products by optimizing productivity, nutrition and sustainability traits, coupling these to consumer preferences.

Few universities have grasped the potential for digital forestry as Purdue University has done. Currently, forest inventories in the U.S. mainly are done manually with less than 1% of our forests measured. We’re also fighting approximately 63,000 wildfires that burn more than 7 million acres with devastating loss and tolls on human health. The same phenotyping tools and digital technologies that will add value to plants will enable worldwide forest analysis, including tree census, mitigation of forest fires and spread of disease.

Scholarly and applied activity in this area will attract agricultural, data science and forest product companies to locate in Indiana to partner with Purdue and others. Employers will seek Purdue Agriculture graduates who have the discipline expertise, data science skills and entrepreneurial training to meet industry needs.

With Purdue’s investments in plant sciences, we will use advanced data analysis to benefit the world by:

  • Keeping forests healthy, productive and resilient
  • Optimizing forest management for timber, fiber, carbon, water, wildlife and recreation
  • Mitigating and monitoring forest fires
  • Preventing the spread of disease and pest outbreaks in forests
  • Adding value to forest products by optimizing productivity and sustainability traits
  • Training a technically proficient workforce

RESOURCES

Digital Forestry is a dynamic field using digital technology, including remote sensing, big data and artificial intelligence, to measure, monitor and manage forests to maximize social, economic and ecological benefits.

Digital Forestry Collaborations
Data Sharing

FEATURED STORIES

Songlin Fei, director of Purdue’s Institute for Digital Forestry and professor in the Department of Forestry and Natural Resources, standing among the trees in Martell Forest.
The Society of American Foresters honors Purdue professor with Award in Forest Science

The Society of American Foresters (SAF) annually recognizes individuals for their outstanding...

Read More
Drone over canopy
Digital forestry can help mitigate and prevent wildfires

The National Interagency Fire Center reports as of this writing that 19,444 fires have burned...

Read More
a robotic arm reaches out to touch a corn plant leaf. you can see the Sheeraz Athar, Jian Jin, and Yu She in the where the arm bends
How robots touch on the future of agriculture

Walking into Purdue’s Mechanisms And Robotic Systems (MARS) Lab feels like falling into a...

Read More
Forest in the spring time
Chris Ardohain: Purdue’s Esri student of the year

Lieutenant Colonel Christopher Ardohain is not your average Purdue graduate student....

Read More
Purdue's bell tower stands tall behind a foreground of purple petunias
Purdue agriculture professors named AAAS Fellows

Purdue College of Agriculture professors Songlin Fei and Tesfaye Mengiste have been named fellows...

Read More
Jingjing Liang stands tall in front of a wall of monitors showing pictures of different forests.
Scientists from dozens of countries coming to Purdue for forestry collaboration in Science-i Bridging Worlds Workshop

In the spirit of building a community to manage and protect the world’s forests, Liang and...

Read More