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Object-based vegetation classification with high resolution remote sensing imagery

Posted on:2006-05-17Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:University of California, BerkeleyCandidate:Yu, QianFull Text:PDF
GTID:1458390008459777Subject:Environmental Sciences
Abstract/Summary:
Vegetation species are valuable indicators to understand the earth system. Information from mapping of vegetation species and community distribution at large scales provides important insight for studying the phenological (growth) cycles of vegetation and plant physiology. Such information plays an important role in land process modeling including climate, ecosystem and hydrological models. The rapidly growing remote sensing technology has increased its potential in vegetation species mapping. However, extracting information at a species level is still a challenging research topic.; I proposed an effective method for extracting vegetation species distribution from remotely sensed data and investigated some ways for accuracy improvement. The study consists of three phases. Firstly, a statistical analysis was conducted to explore the spatial variation and class separability of vegetation as a function of image scale. This analysis aimed to confirm that high resolution imagery contains the information on spatial vegetation variation and these species classes can be potentially separable. The second phase was a major effort in advancing classification by proposing a method for extracting vegetation species from high spatial resolution remote sensing data. The proposed classification employs an object-based approach that integrates GIS and remote sensing data and explores the usefulness of ancillary information. The whole process includes image segmentation, feature generation and selection, and nearest neighbor classification. The third phase introduces a spatial regression model for evaluating the mapping quality from the above vegetation classification results. The effects of six categories of sample characteristics on the classification uncertainty are examined: topography, sample membership, sample density, spatial composition characteristics, training reliability and sample object features. This evaluation analysis answered several interesting scientific questions such as (1) whether the sample characteristics affect the classification accuracy and how significant if it does; (2) how much variance of classification uncertainty can be explained by above factors.; This research is carried out on a hilly peninsular area in Mediterranean climate, Point Reyes National Seashore (PRNS) in Northern California. The area mainly consists of a heterogeneous, semi-natural broadleaf and conifer woodland, shrub land, and annual grassland. A detailed list of vegetation alliances is used in this study.; Research results from the first phase indicates that vegetation spatial variation as reflected by the average local variance (ALV) keeps a high level of magnitude between 1 m and 4 m resolution. (Abstract shortened by UMI.)...
Keywords/Search Tags:Vegetation, Remote sensing, Classification, Resolution, Information
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