4.7 Article

Incorporating the Plant Phenological Trajectory into Mangrove Species Mapping with Dense Time Series Sentinel-2 Imagery and the Google Earth Engine Platform

Journal

REMOTE SENSING
Volume 11, Issue 21, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/rs11212479

Keywords

phenology; species mapping; coastal wetlands; Zhangjiang estuary; Spartina alterniflora

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41601470, 41601406]
  2. Strategic Planning Project of the Institute of Northeast Geography and Agroecology (IGA), Chinese Academy of Sciences [Y6H2091000]
  3. Youth Innovation Promotion Association of Chinese Academy of Sciences [2017277, 2012178]
  4. State Laboratory of Information Engineering in Surveying, Mapping and Remote Sensing, Wuhan University [19I02]
  5. Northeast Branch of National Earth System Science Data Center
  6. Science and Technology Basic Resources Investigation Program of China [2017FY100706]

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Information on mangrove species composition and distribution is key to studying functions of mangrove ecosystems and securing sustainable mangrove conservation. Even though remote sensing technology is developing rapidly currently, mapping mangrove forests at the species level based on freely accessible images is still a great challenge. This study built a Sentinel-2 normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) time series (from 2017-01-01 to 2018-12-31) to represent phenological trajectories of mangrove species and then demonstrated the feasibility of phenology-based mangrove species classification using the random forest algorithm in the Google Earth Engine platform. It was found that (i) in Zhangjiang estuary, the phenological trajectories (NDVI time series) of different mangrove species have great differences; (ii) the overall accuracy and Kappa confidence of the classification map is 84% and 0.84, respectively; and (iii) Months in late winter and early spring play critical roles in mangrove species mapping. This is the first study to use phonological signatures in discriminating mangrove species. The methodology presented can be used as a practical guideline for the mapping of mangrove or other vegetation species in other regions. However, future work should pay attention to various phenological trajectories of mangrove species in different locations.

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