Attribution of disturbance change agent from Landsat time-series in support of habitat monitoring in the Puget Sound region, USA

被引:128
|
作者
Kennedy, Robert E. [1 ]
Yang, Zhiqiang [2 ]
Braaten, Justin [2 ]
Copass, Catharine [3 ]
Antonova, Natalya
Jordan, Chris [4 ]
Nelson, Peder [1 ]
机构
[1] Oregon State Univ, Coll Earth Ocean & Atmospher Sci, Corvallis, OR 97331 USA
[2] Oregon State Univ, Dept Forest Ecosyst & Soc, Corvallis, OR 97331 USA
[3] Natl Pk Serv, North Coast & Cascades Network, Inventory & Monitoring Program, Ashford, WA USA
[4] Pacific Northwest Fisheries Sci Ctr, Seattle, WA USA
关键词
Change attribution; Change detection; Disturbance; Landsat; Time series; LandTrendr; Puget Sound; Salmon; FOREST DISTURBANCE; DETECTING TRENDS; HARVEST; GROWTH; ENVIRONMENT; PATTERNS; IMAGES; AREA;
D O I
10.1016/j.rse.2015.05.005
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
To understand causes and consequences of landscape change, it is often not enough to simply detect change. Rather, the agent causing the change must also be determined. Here, we describe and test a method of change agent attribution built on four tenets: agents operate on patches rather than pixels; temporal context can provide insight into the agent of change; human interpretation is critical because agent labels are inherently human-defined; and statistical modeling must be flexible and non-parametric. In the Puget Sound, USA, we used LandTrendr Landsat time-series-based algorithms to identify abrupt disturbances, and then applied spatial rules to aggregate these to patches. We then derived a suite of spectral, patch-shape, and landscape position variables for each patch. These were then linked to patch-level training labels determined by interpreters at 1198 training patches, and modeled statistically using the Random Forest machine-learning algorithm. Labeled agents of change included urbanization, forest management, and natural change (largely fire), as well as labels associated with spectral change that was non-informative (false change). The success of the method was evaluated using both out-of-bag (OOB) error and a small, fully-independent validation interpretation dataset. Overall OOB accuracy was above 80%, but most successful in the numerically well-represented forest management class. Validation with the independent data was generally lower than that estimated with the OOB approach, but comparable when either first or second voting scores were used for prediction. Spatial and temporal patterns within the study area followed expectations well, with most urbanization occurring in the lower elevation regions around Seattle Tacoma, most forest management occurring in mid-slope managed forests, and most natural disturbance occurring in protected areas. Temporal patterns of change agent aggregated to the watershed level suggest substantial year-over-year variability that could be used to examine year-over-year variability in fish species populations. (C) 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:271 / 285
页数:15
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Reconstructing disturbance history for an intensively mined region by time-series analysis of Landsat imagery
    Li, Jing
    Zipper, Carl E.
    Donovan, Patricia F.
    Wynne, Randolph H.
    Oliphant, Adam J.
    [J]. ENVIRONMENTAL MONITORING AND ASSESSMENT, 2015, 187 (09)
  • [2] Reconstructing disturbance history for an intensively mined region by time-series analysis of Landsat imagery
    Jing Li
    Carl E. Zipper
    Patricia F. Donovan
    Randolph H. Wynne
    Adam J. Oliphant
    [J]. Environmental Monitoring and Assessment, 2015, 187
  • [3] Land change attribution based on Landsat time series and integration of ancillary disturbance data in the Athabasca oil sands region of Canada
    Pouliot, Darren
    Latifovic, Rasim
    [J]. GISCIENCE & REMOTE SENSING, 2016, 53 (03) : 382 - 401
  • [4] Monitoring Wetland Change Using Inter-Annual Landsat Time-Series Data
    Nilam Kayastha
    Valerie Thomas
    John Galbraith
    Asim Banskota
    [J]. Wetlands, 2012, 32 : 1149 - 1162
  • [5] Monitoring Wetland Change Using Inter-Annual Landsat Time-Series Data
    Kayastha, Nilam
    Thomas, Valerie
    Galbraith, John
    Banskota, Asim
    [J]. WETLANDS, 2012, 32 (06) : 1149 - 1162
  • [6] Monitoring of Vegetation Disturbance around Protected Areas in Central Tanzania Using Landsat Time-Series Data
    Komba, Atupelye W.
    Watanabe, Teiji
    Kaneko, Masami
    Chand, Mohan Bahadur
    [J]. REMOTE SENSING, 2021, 13 (09)
  • [7] Perspectives on monitoring gradual change across the continuity of Landsat sensors using time-series data
    Vogelmann, James E.
    Gallant, Alisa L.
    Shi, Hua
    Zhu, Zhe
    [J]. REMOTE SENSING OF ENVIRONMENT, 2016, 185 : 258 - 270
  • [8] Regional detection, characterization, and attribution of annual forest change from 1984 to 2012 using Landsat-derived time-series metrics
    Hermosilla, Txomin
    Wulder, Michael A.
    White, Joanne C.
    Coops, Nicholas C.
    Hobart, Geordie W.
    [J]. REMOTE SENSING OF ENVIRONMENT, 2015, 170 : 121 - 132
  • [9] Attribution of Disturbance Agents to Forest Change Using a Landsat Time Series in Tropical Seasonal Forests in the Bago Mountains, Myanmar
    Shimizu, Katsuto
    Ahmed, Oumer S.
    Ponce-Hernandez, Raul
    Ota, Tetsuji
    Win, Zar Chi
    Mizoue, Nobuya
    Yoshida, Shigejiro
    [J]. FORESTS, 2017, 8 (06):
  • [10] Examining Forest Disturbance and Recovery in the Subtropical Forest Region of Zhejiang Province Using Landsat Time-Series Data
    Liu, Shanshan
    Wei, Xinliang
    Li, Dengqiu
    Lu, Dengsheng
    [J]. REMOTE SENSING, 2017, 9 (05)