scholarly journals Land cover maps of Antananarivo (capital of Madagascar) produced by processing multisource satellite imagery and geospatial reference data

Data in Brief ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 31 ◽  
pp. 105952
Author(s):  
Dupuy Stéphane ◽  
Defrise Laurence ◽  
Gaetano Raffaele ◽  
Andriamanga Valérie ◽  
Rasoamalala Eloise
2013 ◽  
Vol 34 (11) ◽  
pp. 4008-4024 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pedro Sarmento ◽  
Cidália C. Fonte ◽  
Mário Caetano ◽  
Stephen V. Stehman

2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (16) ◽  
pp. 2589
Author(s):  
Tana Qian ◽  
Tsuguki Kinoshita ◽  
Minoru Fujii ◽  
Yuhai Bao

Global land-cover products play an important role in assisting the understanding of climate-related changes and the assessment of progress in the implementation of international initiatives for the mitigation of, and adaption to, climate change. However, concerns over the accuracies of land-cover products remain, due to the issue of validation data uncertainty. The volunteer-based Degree Confluence Project (DCP) was created in 1996, and it has been used to provide useful ground-reference information. This study aims to investigate the impact of DCP-based validation data uncertainty and the thematic issues on map accuracies. We built a reference dataset based on the DCP-interpreted dataset and applied a comparison for three existing global land-cover maps and DCP dataset-based probability maps under different classification schemes. The results of the obtained confusion matrices indicate that the uncertainty, including the number of classes and the confusion in mosaic classes, leads to a decrease in map accuracy. This paper proposes an informative classification scheme that uses a matrix structure of unaggregated land-cover and land-use classes, and has the potential to assist in the land-cover interpretation and validation processes. The findings of this study can potentially serve as a guide to select reference data and choose/define appropriate classification schemes.


2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (18) ◽  
pp. 2954
Author(s):  
Yue Wan ◽  
Jingxiong Zhang ◽  
Wenjing Yang ◽  
Yunwei Tang

Due to spatial inhomogeneity of land-cover types and spectral confusions among them, land-cover maps suffer from misclassification errors. While much research has focused on improving image classification by re-processing source images with more advanced algorithms and/or using images of finer resolution, there is rarely any systematic work on re-processing existing maps to increase their accuracy. We propose refining existing maps to achieve accuracy gains by exploring and utilizing relationships between reference data, which are often already available or can be collected, and map data. For this, we make novel use of canonical correspondence analysis (CCA) to analyze reference-map class co-occurrences to facilitate probabilistic re-classification of map classes in CCA ordination space, a synthesized feature space constrained by map class occurrence patterns. Experiments using GlobeLand30 land-cover (2010) over Wuhan, China were carried out using reference sample data collected previously for accuracy assessment in the same area. Reference sample data were stratified by map classes and their spatial heterogeneity. To examine effects of model-training sample size on refinements, three subset samples (360, 720, and 1480 pixels) were selected from a pool of 3000 sample pixels (the full training sample). Logistic regression modeling was employed as a baseline method for comparisons. Performance evaluation was based on a test sample of 1020 pixels using a strict and relaxed definitions of agreement between reference classification and map classification, resulting in measures of types I and II, respectively. It was found that the CCA-based method is more accurate than logistic regression in general. With increasing sample sizes, refinements generally lead to greater accuracy gains. Heterogeneous sub-strata usually see greater accuracy gains than in homogeneous sub-strata. It was also revealed that accuracy gains in specific strata (map classes and sub-strata) are related to strata refinability. Regarding CCA-based refinements, a relatively small sample of 360 pixels achieved a 3% gain in both overall accuracy (OA) and F0.01 score (II). By using a selective strategy in which only refinable strata of cultivated land and forest are included in refinement, accuracy gains are further increased, with 5–11% gains in users’ accuracies (UAs) (II) and 4–10% gains in F0.01 scores (II). In conclusion, on condition of refinability, map refinement is well worth pursuing, as it increases accuracy of existing maps, extends utility of reference data, facilitates uncertainty-informed map representation, and enhances our understanding about relationships between reference data and map data and about their synthesis.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zoltan Szantoi ◽  
Andreas Brink ◽  
Andrea Lupi ◽  
Claudio Mannone ◽  
Gabriel Jaffrain

Abstract. Threats to biodiversity pose an enormous challenge for Africa. Mounting social and economic demands on natural resources increasingly threaten key areas for conservation. Effective protection of sites of strategic conservation importance requires timely and highly detailed geospatial monitoring. Larger ecological zones and wildlife corridors warrant monitoring as well, as these areas have an even higher degree of pressure and habitat loss. To address this, a satellite imagery based monitoring workflow to cover at-risk areas at various details was developed. During the program's first phase, a total of 560,442 km2 area in Sub-Saharan Africa was covered, from which 153,665 km2 were mapped with 8 land cover classes while 406,776 km2 were mapped with up to 32 classes. Satellite imagery was used to generate dense time series data from which thematic land cover maps were derived. Each map and change map were fully verified and validated by an independent team to achieve our strict data quality requirements. The independent validation datasets for each KLCs are also described and presented here (The complete dataset available at Szantoi et al., 2020B https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.914261, and a demonstration dataset at Szantoi et al., 2020C https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.915849).


2021 ◽  
Vol 3 ◽  
Author(s):  
Holli A. Kohl ◽  
Peder V. Nelson ◽  
John Pring ◽  
Kristen L. Weaver ◽  
Daniel M. Wiley ◽  
...  

Land cover and land use are highly visible indicators of climate change and human disruption to natural processes. While land cover is frequently monitored over a large area using satellite data, ground-based reference data is valuable as a comparison point. The NASA-funded GLOBE Observer (GO) program provides volunteer-collected land cover photos tagged with location, date and time, and, in some cases, land cover type. When making a full land cover observation, volunteers take six photos of the site, one facing north, south, east, and west (N-S-E-W), respectively, one pointing straight up to capture canopy and sky, and one pointing down to document ground cover. Together, the photos document a 100-meter square of land. Volunteers may then optionally tag each N-S-E-W photo with the land cover types present. Volunteers collect the data through a smartphone app, also called GLOBE Observer, resulting in consistent data. While land cover data collected through GLOBE Observer is ongoing, this paper presents the results of a data challenge held between June 1 and October 15, 2019. Called “GO on a Trail,” the challenge resulted in more than 3,300 land cover data points from around the world with concentrated data collection in the United States and Australia. GLOBE Observer collections can serve as reference data, complementing satellite imagery for the improvement and verification of broad land cover maps. Continued collection using this protocol will build a database documenting climate-related land cover and land use change into the future.


2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (4) ◽  
pp. 3001-3019
Author(s):  
Zoltan Szantoi ◽  
Andreas Brink ◽  
Andrea Lupi ◽  
Claudio Mammone ◽  
Gabriel Jaffrain

Abstract. Mounting social and economic demands on natural resources increasingly threaten key areas for conservation in Africa. Threats to biodiversity pose an enormous challenge to these vulnerable areas. Effective protection of sites with strategic conservation importance requires timely and highly detailed geospatial monitoring. Larger ecological zones and wildlife corridors warrant monitoring as well, as these areas have an even higher degree of pressure and habitat loss. To address this, a satellite-imagery-based monitoring workflow to cover at-risk areas at various details was developed. During the program's first phase, a total of 560 442 km2 area in sub-Saharan Africa was covered, from which 153 665 km2 was mapped with eight land cover classes while 406 776 km2 was mapped with up to 32 classes. Satellite imagery was used to generate dense time series data from which thematic land cover maps were derived. Each map and change map were fully verified and validated by an independent team to achieve our strict data quality requirements. The independent validation datasets for each key landscape for conservation (KLC) are also described and presented here (full and teaser datasets are available at https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.914261, Szantoi et al., 2020a).


2018 ◽  
Vol 10 (9) ◽  
pp. 1457 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cheng Zhong ◽  
Cuizhen Wang ◽  
Hui Li ◽  
Wenlong Chen ◽  
Yong Hou

Most land cover mapping methods require the collection of ground reference data at the time when the remotely sensed data are acquired. Due to the high cost of repetitive collection of reference data, however, it limits the production of annual land cover maps to a short time span. In order to reduce the mapping cost and to improve the timeliness, an object-based sample transfer (OBST) method was presented in this study. The object-based analysis with strict constrains in area, shape and index values is expected to reduce the accident errors in selecting and transferring samples. The presented method was tested and compared with same-year mapping (SY), cross-year mapping (CY) and multi-index automatic classification (MI). For the study years of 2001–2016, both the overall accuracies (above 90%) and detailed accuracy indicators of the presented method were very close to the SY accuracy and higher than accuracies of CY and MI. With the presented method, the times-series land cover map of Guangzhou, China were derived and analyzed. The results reveal that the city has undergone rapid urban expansion and the pressure on natural resources and environment has increased. These results indicate the proposed method could save considerable cost and time for mapping the spatial-temporal changes of urban development. This suggests great potential for future applications as more satellite observations have become available all over the globe.


2015 ◽  
Author(s):  
Noriko Soyama ◽  
Kanako Muramatsu ◽  
Itsuko Ohashi ◽  
Motomasa Daigo ◽  
Fumio Ochiai ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 10
Author(s):  
Beny Harjadi ◽  
Pranata Dyah Susanti

The purpose of this study is to calculate qualitative erosion with digital analysis of satellite imagery in Subwatershed Tulis. Planning for a watershed for the long term requires the calculation of qualitative erosion values that are accurate and spread evenly to each land unit. This study uses digital analysis methods by relying on the digital value of each pixel that can be performed mathematically. Satellite images used are Landsat TM 8 images on October 31, 2016, and a radar image is SRTM (Shuttle Radar Topography Mission). The analysis was carried out by calculating each of the factors causing erosion in the form of drainage maps, aspect maps, slope maps, texture maps, and land cover maps. Each factor was given a score or score from 1 to 3, namely low (1), medium (2) and high (3), so that after being calculated by the method of SES (Soil Erosion Status) it became light level erosion (1) <50, medium (2 ) = 50-100 and weight (3)> 100 tons/ha/ year. The results of the calculation of qualitative erosion in Sub-watershed Tulis which has an area of 12,750 ha, obtained light erosion 4% (529 ha), medium 85% (10,781 ha), and weight 11% (1,440 ha).


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