Tuesday, April 10, 2012

Mapping invasive woody species in coastal dunes in the Netherlands: a remote sensing approach using LIDAR and high-resolution aerial photographs

Abstract

Questions

Does remote sensing improve classification of invasive woody species in dunes, useful for shrub management? Does additional height information and an object-based classifier increase woody species classification accuracy?

Location

The dunes of Vlieland, one of the Wadden Sea Islands, the Netherlands.

Methods

Extensive monitoring using optical remote sensing and LIDAR deliver large amounts of high-quality data to observe and manage coastal dunes as a defence against the sea in the Netherlands. Using these additional data could increase the accuracy of vegetation mapping and monitoring in coastal areas. In this study, a remote sensing approach has been developed to deliver detailed and standardized maps of (invasive) woody species in the dunes of Vlieland using multispectral aerial photographs and vegetation height derived from LIDAR. Three classification methods were used: maximum likelihood (ML) classification using aerial photographs, ML classification combined with vegetation heights derived from LIDAR (ML+) and object-based (OB) classification.

Results

The use of vegetation height from the LIDAR data increased the overall classification accuracy from 39% to 50%, but particularly improved classification of the taller woody species. The object-based classification increased the overall accuracy of the ML+ from 50% to 60%. The object-based results are comparable to human visual analysis while offering automated analysis.

Conclusions

Overall, the object-based classification delivers detailed maps of the woody species that are useful for management and evaluation of alien and invasive species in dune ecosystems.

Thumbnail image of graphical abstract

To map invasive alien shrub species in dune ecosystems we developed three classification methods based on remote sensing. The object-based classification, using multispectral aerial photographs and vegetation structure indices derived from LIDAR, gave the best classification accuracy. A shrub map on single species level, useful for the management of alien and invasive species, was created for Vlieland, the Netherlands.

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