4.7 Article

Land Cover Classification of Complex Agroecosystems in the Non-Protected Highlands of the Galapagos Islands

Journal

REMOTE SENSING
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/rs12010065

Keywords

agriculture; conservation; galapagos; image fusion; invasive species; land cover; planetscope; random forest; sentinel-2; uav

Funding

  1. Russel E. Train Fellowship from World Wildlife Fund
  2. off-campus research fellowships from the Graduate School at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
  3. Universidad San Francisco de Quito USFQ Research Publication Fund
  4. Galapagos Science Center

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The humid highlands of the Galapagos are the islands' most biologically productive regions and a key habitat for endemic animal and plant species. These areas are crucial for the region's food security and for the control of invasive plants, but little is known about the spatial distribution of its land cover. We generated a baseline high-resolution land cover map of the agricultural zones and their surrounding protected areas. We combined the high spatial resolution of PlanetScope images with the high spectral resolution of Sentinel-2 images in an object-based classification using a RandomForest algorithm. We used images collected with an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) to verify and validate our classified map. Despite the astounding diversity and heterogeneity of the highland landscape, our classification yielded useful results (overall Kappa: 0.7, R-2: 0.69) and revealed that across all four inhabited islands, invasive plants cover the largest fraction (28.5%) of the agricultural area, followed by pastures (22.3%), native vegetation (18.6%), food crops (18.3%), and mixed forest and pioneer plants (11.6%). Our results are consistent with historical trajectories of colonization and abandonment of the highlands. The produced dataset is designed to suit the needs of practitioners of both conservation and agriculture and aims to foster collaboration between the two areas.

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