Title of article :
Mapping tropical dry forest height, foliage height profiles and disturbance type and age with a time series of cloud-cleared Landsat and ALI image mosaics to characterize avian habitat
Author/Authors :
Helmer، نويسنده , , E.H. and Ruzycki، نويسنده , , Thomas S. and Wunderle Jr.، نويسنده , , Joseph M. and Vogesser، نويسنده , , Shannon and Ruefenacht، نويسنده , , Bonnie and Kwit، نويسنده , , Charles and Brandeis، نويسنده , , Thomas J. and Ewert، نويسنده , , David N.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Pages :
17
From page :
2457
To page :
2473
Abstract :
Remote sensing of forest vertical structure is possible with lidar data, but lidar is not widely available. Here we map tropical dry forest height (RMSE = 0.9 m, R2 = 0.84, range 0.6–7 m), and we map foliage height profiles, with a time series of Landsat and Advanced Land Imager (ALI) imagery on the island of Eleuthera, The Bahamas, substituting time for vertical canopy space. We also simultaneously map forest disturbance type and age. We map these variables in the context of avian habitat studies, particularly for wintering habitat of an endangered Nearctic-Neotropical migrant bird, the Kirtlandʹs Warbler (Dendroica kirtlandii). We also illustrate relationships between forest vertical structure, disturbance type and counts of forage species important to the Kirtlandʹs Warbler. The ALI imagery and the Landsat time series are both critical to the result for forest height, which the strong relationship of forest height with disturbance type and age facilitates. Also unique to this study is that seven of the eight image time steps are cloud-cleared images: mosaics of the clear parts of several cloudy scenes. We created each cloud-cleared image, including a virtually seamless ALI image mosaic, with regression tree normalization. We also illustrate how viewing time series imagery as red–green–blue composites of tasseled cap wetness (RGB wetness composites) aids reference data collection for classifying tropical forest disturbance type and age. Our results strongly support current Landsat Program production of co-registered imagery, and they emphasize the value of seamless time series of cloud-cleared imagery.
Keywords :
NDSI , NDVI , Normalized difference structure index , NDSI , Normalized difference infrared index , NDII , Cloud-free image mosaics , Avian habitat , Change detection , Land-cover change , Composite imagery , Kirtlandיs Warbler , Forest disturbance , image fusion , Normalized difference vegetation index , Visualization , Normalized difference moisture index , Merged imagery
Journal title :
Remote Sensing of Environment
Serial Year :
2010
Journal title :
Remote Sensing of Environment
Record number :
1630159
Link To Document :
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