• DocumentCode
    3123244
  • Title

    Agricultural Burning Detection Using Remote Sensing: A Case Study in Zhejiang Province, China

  • Author

    Zhang, Zili ; Yu, Haiyan ; Hu, Zunying ; Zhou, Bin ; Han, Mingchun

  • Author_Institution
    Zhejiang Environ. Monitoring Centre, Hangzhou, China
  • fYear
    2010
  • fDate
    18-20 June 2010
  • Firstpage
    1
  • Lastpage
    4
  • Abstract
    Random agricultural burning such as crop straw fire, especial during the harvest seasons of summer and autumn, is a very common phenomenon in rural or suburban cities in China. However, several pollutions may caused by this kind of biomass burning including climate-destructive aerosols and carbon fluxes which decrease seriously regional air quality and may have an negative impact on public human health leading to respiratory illness. Using remote sensing is an available method to detect and monitor agricultural burning arbitrarily with its better time and spatial effectiveness. As a part of EOS mission, MODIS was suitable for fire detection as some high-temperature-sensitive bands of the sensor had been improved. A hybrid algorithm presented by the paper had archived two major advancements on adjusting the potential thresholds to suit lower temperature of crop straw burning than forest fires and introducing latest land cover data to exclude fake agriculture burning fire points which not located in croplands. The results had been validated by FIRMS´s active fire production suggesting that the modified algorithm works well for agriculture burning under complex land characteristic of eastern China, especially in Zhejiang province. A very large potential for satellite data as an efficient method to detect agriculture burning was also demonstrated in the study.
  • Keywords
    agriculture; combustion; crops; fires; remote sensing; renewable materials; China; EOS mission; FIRMS active fire production; MODIS; Zhejiang province; agricultural burning detection; air quality; biomass burning; carbon fluxes; climate-destructive aerosols; crop straw fire; croplands; fire detection; forest fires; high-temperature-sensitive bands; hybrid algorithm; public human health; random agricultural burning; remote sensing; satellite data; suburban cities; Aerosols; Agriculture; Air pollution; Biomass; Carbon dioxide; Cities and towns; Crops; Fires; Remote monitoring; Remote sensing;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Bioinformatics and Biomedical Engineering (iCBBE), 2010 4th International Conference on
  • Conference_Location
    Chengdu
  • ISSN
    2151-7614
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-4244-4712-1
  • Electronic_ISBN
    2151-7614
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/ICBBE.2010.5516543
  • Filename
    5516543