4.0 Article

Quantifying landscape structure with vegetation inventory maps and remote sensing

Journal

FORESTRY CHRONICLE
Volume 78, Issue 6, Pages 866-875

Publisher

CANADIAN INST FORESTRY
DOI: 10.5558/tfc78866-6

Keywords

fragmentation; satellite remote sensing; GIS vegetation inventory maps; landscape metrics

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Two input maps based on Alberta Vegetation Inventory (AVI) data and Landsat satellite imagery were generated for use in a fragmentation analysis of a large area in the Alberta Yellowhead Ecosystem to support lon-term grizzly bear habitat analysis. Accuracy was assessed using visual interpretation of classes on digital orthophotography. Approximately 45% map accuracy was obtained after applying a generalization procedure to the available AVI GIS database. Approximately 80% map accuracy was achieved used a supervised classification approach applied to the Landsat image, Differences in accuracy were most apparent in non-treed vegetation classes (e.g., shrub), closed conifer, mixedwood and deciduous forest Classes. Verb large differences were observed in many of the landscape metrics computed from these two maps to quantify landscape structure. Simulating forest changes on these maps illustrated the difficulty of comparing maps generated with different geospatial technologies.

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