4.7 Article

Monitoring of cropland practices for carbon sequestration purposes in north central Montana by Landsat remote sensing

Journal

REMOTE SENSING OF ENVIRONMENT
Volume 113, Issue 9, Pages 1843-1852

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.rse.2009.04.015

Keywords

Carbon sequestration validation; Tillage type; Conservation reserve; Crop intensity; Landsat; Random Forest; Object-oriented

Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Energy [DE-FC26-05NT42587]

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We used an object-oriented approach in conjunction with the Random Forest algorithm to classify agricultural practices, including tillage (till or no-till (NT)), crop intensity, and grassland-based conservation reserve (CR). The object-oriented approach allowed for per-field classifications and the incorporation of contextual elements in addition to spectral features. Random Forest is a classification tree-based advanced classifier that avoids data over-fitting associated with many tree-based models and incorporates an unbiased internal classification accuracy assessment. Landsat satellite imagery was chosen for its continuous coverage, cost effectiveness, and image accessibility. Classification results for 2007 included producer's accuracies of 91% for NT and 31% for tillage when applying Random Forest to image objects generated from a May Landsat image. Low classification accuracies likely were attributed to the misclassification of conservation-based tillage practices as NT. Results showed that the binary separation of tillage from NT management is likely not appropriate due to surface spectral and textural similarities between NT and conservation-type tillage practices. Crop and CR lands resulted in producer's accuracies of 100% and 90%, respectively. Crop and fallow producer's accuracies were 95% and 82% in the 2007 classification, despite post-senesced vegetation; misclassification within the fallow class was attributed to pixel-mixing problems in areas of narrow (<100 m) strip management. A between-date normalized difference vegetation index approach was successfully used to detect areas having changed in vegetation status between the 2007 and prior image dates; classified changed objects were then merged with unchanged objects to produce crop status maps. Field crop intensity was then determined from the multi-year analysis of generated crop status maps. (C) 2009 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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