4.6 Article

Automated Mapping of Wetland Ecosystems: A Study Using Google Earth Engine and Machine Learning for Lotus Mapping in Central Vietnam

Journal

WATER
Volume 15, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/w15050854

Keywords

wetland; lotus; google earth engine; sentinel image; machine learning; random forest; gradient boosting machine

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Wetlands are productive ecosystems that sequester carbon and offer a solution to climate change. Despite advancements in remote sensing, accurate and automatic mapping of wetlands remains challenging due to complex input data. This study proposes a remote sensing approach using Google Earth Engine to automate the extraction of water bodies and mapping of growing lotus in Vietnam. The proposed framework, which utilizes K-Means clustering and machine learning models, achieved high accuracy in water extraction and lotus mapping. The technique has potential for large-scale mapping of other wetland types worldwide.
Wetlands are highly productive ecosystems with the capability of carbon sequestration, providing an effective solution for climate change. Recent advancements in remote sensing have improved the accuracy in the mapping of wetland types, but there remain challenges in accurate and automatic wetland mapping, with additional requirements for complex input data for a number of wetland types in natural habitats. Here, we propose a remote sensing approach using the Google Earth Engine (GEE) to automate the extraction of water bodies and mapping of growing lotus, a wetland type with high economic and cultural values in central Vietnam. Sentinel-1 was used for water extraction with the K-Means clustering, whilst Sentinel-2 was combined with the machine learning smile Random Forest (sRF) and smile Gradient Tree Boosting (sGTB) models to map areas with growing lotus. The water map was derived from S-1 images with high confidence (F-1 = 0.97 and Kappa coefficient = 0.94). sGTB outperformed the sRF model to deliver a growth map with a high accuracy (overall accuracy = 0.95, Kappa coefficient = 0.92, Precision = 0.93, and F-1 = 0.93). The total lotus area was estimated at 145 ha and was distributed in the low land of the study site. Our proposed framework is a simple and reliable mapping technique, has a scalable potential with the GEE, and is capable of extension to other wetland types for large-scale mapping worldwide.

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