Publication detail
Does the data resolution/origin matter? Satellite, airborne and UAV imagery to tackle plant invasions
Müllerová, J. Brůna, J. Dvořák, P. Bartaloš, T. Vítková, M.
Czech title
Hraje roli rozlišení a původ dat? Satelitní, letecká a bezpilotní data pro zvládání rostlinných invazí
English title
Does the data resolution/origin matter? Satellite, airborne and UAV imagery to tackle plant invasions
Type
conference paper
Language
en
Original abstract
Invasive plant species represent a serious threat to biodiversity and landscape as well as human health and socio-economy. To successfully fight plant invasions, new methods enabling fast and efficient monitoring, such as remote sensing, are needed. In an ongoing project, optical remote sensing (RS) data of different origin (satellite, aerial and UAV), spectral (panchromatic, multispectral and color), spatial (very high to medium) and temporal resolution, and various technical approaches (object-, pixel-based and combined) are tested to choose the best strategies for monitoring of four invasive plant species (giant hogweed, black locust, tree of heaven and exotic knotweeds). In our study, we address trade-offs between spectral, spatial and temporal resolutions required for balance between the precision of detection and economic feasibility. For the best results, it is necessary to choose best combination of spatial and spectral resolution and phenological stage of the plant in focus. For species forming distinct inflorescences such as giant hogweed iterative semi-automated object-oriented approach was successfully applied even for low spectral resolution data (if pixel size was sufficient) whereas for lower spatial resolution satellite imagery or less distinct species with complicated architecture such as knotweed, combination of pixel and object based approaches was used. High accuracies achieved for very high resolution data indicate the possible application of described methodology for monitoring invasions and their long-term dynamics elsewhere, making management measures comparably precise, fast and efficient. This knowledge serves as a basis for prediction, monitoring and prioritization of management targets.
Czech abstract
Příspěvek popisuje aplikaci bezpilotních leteckých prostředků pro detekci a monitoring invazních rostlinných druhů jako velmi účinnou metodu.
English abstract
Invasive plant species represent a serious threat to biodiversity and landscape as well as human health and socio-economy. To successfully fight plant invasions, new methods enabling fast and efficient monitoring, such as remote sensing, are needed. In an ongoing project, optical remote sensing (RS) data of different origin (satellite, aerial and UAV), spectral (panchromatic, multispectral and color), spatial (very high to medium) and temporal resolution, and various technical approaches (object-, pixel-based and combined) are tested to choose the best strategies for monitoring of four invasive plant species (giant hogweed, black locust, tree of heaven and exotic knotweeds). In our study, we address trade-offs between spectral, spatial and temporal resolutions required for balance between the precision of detection and economic feasibility. For the best results, it is necessary to choose best combination of spatial and spectral resolution and phenological stage of the plant in focus. For species forming distinct inflorescences such as giant hogweed iterative semi-automated object-oriented approach was successfully applied even for low spectral resolution data (if pixel size was sufficient) whereas for lower spatial resolution satellite imagery or less distinct species with complicated architecture such as knotweed, combination of pixel and object based approaches was used. High accuracies achieved for very high resolution data indicate the possible application of described methodology for monitoring invasions and their long-term dynamics elsewhere, making management measures comparably precise, fast and efficient. This knowledge serves as a basis for prediction, monitoring and prioritization of management targets.
Keywords in Czech
Detekce, invazní druhy, mapování, multispektrální data, objektově a pixelově orientovaná klasifikace, prostorové a temporální rozlišení, spektrální
Keywords in English
Detection; Invasive species; Mapping; MSS imagery; Object- and pixel-based classification; Spatial and temporal resolution; Spectral
Released
02.09.2016
Publisher
International Society of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing (ISPRS), Copernicus
Location
Prague, Czech Republic
ISSN
1682-1750
Book
XXIII ISPRS Congress, 12–19 July 2016, Prague, Czech Republic
Volume
XLI-B7
Number
ThS15
Edition number
1
Pages from–to
903–908
Pages count
6
BIBTEX
@inproceedings{BUT130310,
author="Petr {Dvořák},
title="Does the data resolution/origin matter? Satellite, airborne and UAV imagery to tackle plant invasions",
booktitle="XXIII ISPRS Congress, 12–19 July 2016, Prague, Czech Republic",
year="2016",
volume="XLI-B7",
number="ThS15",
month="September",
pages="903--908",
publisher="International Society of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing (ISPRS), Copernicus",
address="Prague, Czech Republic",
issn="1682-1750"
}