4.5 Article

Wetland spectral unmixing using multispectral satellite images

Journal

GEOCARTO INTERNATIONAL
Volume 37, Issue 27, Pages 15754-15777

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/10106049.2022.2102225

Keywords

Wetland; spectral unmixing; classification; fractional land cover

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Wetlands are important for biodiversity and ecosystems, and monitoring their extent and ground characteristics is crucial for sustainable development. This study proposes a remote sensing-based method to determine the extent of wetlands and extract their ground features at the sub-pixel level. Experimental results using wetlands in Turkey demonstrate the accuracy of the method in determining wetland extent and identifying land cover classes.
Wetlands are of great importance to the diversity of biota and ecology, thereby to humans. Monitoring such valuable areas is essential for sustainable development. When the sizes, geographic distribution, and total coverage of wetlands across the earth are taken into account, remote sensing shines out as the most economically and technically feasible method to realise the monitoring task. Concerning the utilisation of medium resolution satellite images as the input, the pixel-level approach falls short of understanding the wetland dynamics since vast amounts of pixels in such areas have mixed content. This study proposes a framework for determining the extent of wetlands and extracting their ground characteristics at the sub-pixel level. In the extent determination part, Tasselled Cap Water Index (TCWI) values are calculated on time series, and their variations throughout the year are modelled by fitting a double-sided sigmoid function. This information is coupled with Digital Terrain Model (DTM) thresholding to extract the final extent. A sub-pixel analysis is proposed for the latter part, which includes adopting a systematic approach using a three-element (soil, vegetation, water) scheme for establishing wetland ontology and implementing supervised spectral unmixing enhanced by band weight optimisation. Balikdami, one of the most impressive wetlands of Turkey, is chosen as the test area. Open-access optical satellite data acquired by the Sentinel-2 constellation are utilised as the primary data input. Since the abundance values of land cover classes in each Sentinel-2 pixel are estimated, reference abundance data with a 10 m ground sampling distance (GSD) are generated using four-band aerial images having a 30 cm GSD for the verification stage. A new method entitled 'Abundance Confusion Matrix' is introduced for comparison and detailed assessment of fractional land cover. Experimental results demonstrate that the extent determination is addressed with a precision of 99.21% and a miss rate of 5.75%. In addition, the abundance values of land cover classes are identified with an overall accuracy of 66.17% after the optimisation step. The proposed method proves to be a valuable tool for the detailed monitoring of wetlands.

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