Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/19183
Title: Mapping land cover types in the amazon basin using 1 km JERS-1 mosaic
Authors: Saatchi, Sassan S.
Nelson, Bruce Walker
Podest, Erika V.
Holt, John W.
Keywords: Deforestation
Jers-1
Land Cover
Mapping
Regeneration
Synthetic Aperture Radar
Tropical Forest
Amazonia
Issue Date: 2000
metadata.dc.publisher.journal: International Journal of Remote Sensing
metadata.dc.relation.ispartof: Volume 21, Número 6-7, Pags. 1201-1234
Abstract: During the Global Rain Forest Mapping (GRFM) project, the JERS-1 SAR (Synthetic Aperture Radar) satellite acquired wall-to-wall image coverage of the humid tropical forests of the world. The rationale for the project was to demonstrate the application of spaceborne L-band radar in tropical forest studies. In particular, the use of orbital radar data for mapping land cover types, estimating the area of floodplains, and monitoring deforestation and forest regeneration were of primary importance. In this paper we examine the information content of the JERS-1 SAR data for mapping land cover types in the Amazon basin. More than 1500 high-resolution (12.5 m pixel spacing) images acquired during the low flood period of the Amazon river were resampled to 100 m resolution and mosaicked into a seamless image of about 8 million km2, including the entire Amazon basin. This image was used in a classifier to generate a 1 km resolution land cover map. The inputs to the classifier were 1 km resolution mean backscatter and seven first-order texture measures derived from the 100 m data by using a 10 x 10 independent sampling window. The classification approach included two interdependent stages. First, a supervised maximum a posteriori Baysian approach classified the mean backscatter image into five general cover categories: terra firme forest (including secondary forest), savanna, inundated vegetation, open deforested areas and open water. A hierarchical decision rule based on texture measures was then applied to attempt further discrimination of known subcategories of vegetation types based on taxonomic information and woody biomass levels. True distributions of the general categories were identified from the RADAMBRASIL project vegetation maps and several field studies. Training and validation test sites were chosen from the JERS-1 image by consulting the RADAM vegetation maps. After several iterations and combining land cover types, 14 vegetation classes were successfully separated at the 1 km scale. The accuracy of the classification methodology was estimated to be 78% when using the validation sites. The results were also verified by comparison with the RADAM- and AVHRR-based 1 km resolution land cover maps. © 2000 Taylor and Francis Ltd.
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: 10.1080/014311600210146
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