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    Optimisation of savannah fractional woody vegetation cover mapping using optical and radar data

    Symeonakis, Ilias ORCID logoORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1724-2869 and Marques-Mateu, A (2017) Optimisation of savannah fractional woody vegetation cover mapping using optical and radar data. In: 37th International Symposium on Remote Sensing of Environment, 08 May 2017 - 12 May 2017, Tshwane, South Africa. (Unpublished)

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    Abstract

    The fraction of woody vegetation plays an important role in natural and anthropogenic processes of savannah ecosystems. We investigate the optimal combination of Landsat optical and thermal bands as well as ALOS PALSAR L-band radar data from both wet and dry seasons for the mapping of fractional woody vegetation cover in southern African savannah environments. We employ colour aerial photography for sampling and validation and a random forest classification approach to map the fraction of woody cover in an area of 1200 km2 in the Northwest Province of South Africa. Our results from random forests classifications show that the most accurate estimates are produced from the model that incorporates all parameters: Landsat optical and thermal bands and vegetation indices (NDVI and MSAVI) for the dry and wet seasons, and HH and HV polarised ALOS PALSAR L-band data. However, the combination of the six Landsat bands from either the wet or the dry season with either the HH or the HV PALSAR band, appears to be sufficient for achieving fractional woody cover balanced accuracies of >85%. Dry season optical bands alone are able to map fractional woody cover with more than 80% balanced accuracy. Our findings can provide much needed assistance to woody vegetation monitoring efforts in southern African savannahs where its observed expansion over the last decades is partly attributed to bush encroachment and land degradation brought about by recent climatic changes and/or land mismanagement.

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