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A satellite data set for tropical forest area change assessment
Authors:Rene Beuchle  Hugh D Eva  Hans-Jürgen Stibig  Catherine Bodart  Andreas Brink  Philippe Mayaux
Affiliation:1. Joint Research Centre of the European Commission , Institute of Environment and Sustainability , TP 440, Ispra , 21027 , Italy rene.beuchle@jrc.ec.europa.eu;3. Joint Research Centre of the European Commission , Institute of Environment and Sustainability , TP 440, Ispra , 21027 , Italy
Abstract:A database of largely cloud-free (less than 2.5% of all sites have more than 5% cloud cover), geo-referenced 20 km?×?20 km sample sites of 30 m resolution optical satellite imagery have been prepared for the 1990 and 2000 epochs. This spans the tropics with a systematic sample located at the degree confluence points of the geographic grid. The resulting 4016 sample pairs are to be used to measure changes in the area of forest cover between the two epochs. The primary data source was the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's (NASA's) global land survey (GLS) data sets. Visual screening of GLS images at all 4016 confluence points from each date identified 2868 suitable pairs where no better alternatives exist (71.6% of the sample). Better alternatives could be found for 26.6% of the sample, substituting cloudy or missing GLS data sets at one or the other epoch or both (GLS-1990 or GLS-2000). Gaps were filled from the United States Geological Survey (USGS) Landsat archives (1070 samples), data from other Landsat archives (53 samples) or with alternatives to Landsat, that is, 15 samples from Satellite Pour l'Observation de la Terre (SPOT). This increased the effective number of sample pairs to 3945 representing 98% of all target samples. No suitable image pairs were found for 71 confluence points, which were not randomly distributed, but mostly concentrated in the Congo basin, where around 15% of the region remains un-sampled. Variations in date of image acquisition and geometric fidelity are documented. Results highlight the importance of combining systematic data-processing schemes with targeted image acquisition and archiving strategies for global scale applications such as deforestation monitoring and shows that by replacing cloudy or missing GLS data with alternative imagery, the overall coverage of the sample sites within the ecological zones ‘Tropical rainforest’ and ‘Tropical mountain system’ can be improved by 16%.
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