Multitemporal Landsat TM data for stand-based management in northern US forest ecosystems
- P. Coppin
Abstract
Multitemporal Landsat Thematic Mapper (TM) imagery was processed and forest canopy change information was extracted over a 415 km2 area in north central Minnesota. The study covered two-, four-, and six-year disturbance monitoring cycles. At the pixel level, the detection of canopy depletion and increment dynamics over the six-year interval was 94% accurate. The stand-based accuracy was 714 out of 759 (also 94%). Here change was detected in at least 50% of the total number of pixels that made up the individual stands. This paper specifically discusses the information content of multitemporal multispectral satellite data from the perspective of traditional stand management. Cross-verification using contingency matrices and geographical information system (GIS) modelling, combined with intensive field verification, has shown that the majority of the so-called "change classification errors" were not errors at all, but a powerful source of substand information that can significantly impact sustainable resource management. While the digital disturbance monitoring methodology as developed for this study does not perform its task at the stand level, stand data on change can be readily extracted with the additional benefit of explicit substand information being made available to the resource manager.
How to Cite:
Coppin, P., (1994) “Multitemporal Landsat TM data for stand-based management in northern US forest ecosystems”, Silva Gandavensis 59. doi: https://doi.org/10.21825/sg.v59i0.872
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