4.7 Article

Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) for Monitoring Macroalgal Biodiversity: Comparison of RGB and Multispectral Imaging Sensors for Biodiversity Assessments

Journal

REMOTE SENSING
Volume 11, Issue 19, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/rs11192332

Keywords

drones; multispectral; macroalgae; biodiversity; unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs); habitat; classification

Funding

  1. Sustainable Seas National Science Challenge (New Zealand) [C01X1515]
  2. New Zealand Ministry for Business Innovation and Employment [UOCX1704]
  3. New Zealand Ministry of Business, Innovation & Employment (MBIE) [UOCX1704] Funding Source: New Zealand Ministry of Business, Innovation & Employment (MBIE)

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Developments in the capabilities and affordability of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) have led to an explosion in their use for a range of ecological and agricultural remote sensing applications. However, the ubiquity of visible light cameras aboard readily available UAVs may be limiting the application of these devices for fine-scale, high taxonomic resolution monitoring. Here we compare the use of RGB and multispectral cameras deployed aboard UAVs for assessing intertidal and shallow subtidal marine macroalgae to a high taxonomic resolution. Our results show that the diverse spectral profiles of marine macroalgae naturally lend themselves to remote sensing and habitat classification. Furthermore, we show that biodiversity assessments, particularly in shallow subtidal habitats, are enhanced using six-band discrete wavelength multispectral sensors (81% accuracy, Cohen's Kappa) compared to three-band broad channel RGB sensors (79% accuracy, Cohen's Kappa) for 10 habitat classes. Combining broad band RGB signals and narrow band multispectral sensing further improved the accuracy of classification with a combined accuracy of 90% (Cohen's Kappa). Despite notable improvements in accuracy with multispectral imaging, RGB sensors were highly capable of broad habitat classification and rivaled multispectral sensors for classifying intertidal habitats. High spatial scale monitoring of turbid exposed rocky reefs presents a unique set of challenges, but the limitations of more traditional methods can be overcome by targeting ideal conditions with UAVs.

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