4.6 Article

The potential for integrating Sentinel 2 MSI with SPOT 5 HRG and Landsat 8 OLI imagery for monitoring semi-arid savannah woody cover

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF REMOTE SENSING
Volume 38, Issue 17, Pages 4888-4913

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/01431161.2017.1331057

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Research Foundation of South Africa [91110]
  2. North-West University

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Multitemporal archived imagery enables the monitoring of savannah woody cover, for ecological purposes. Compatibility in multi-temporal, multiple sensor image data would facilitate the monitoring. The decommissioning of SPOT 5 (Systeme Pour l'Observation de la Terre 5) left a void in multispectral imagery at the 10 m spatial resolution of its high-resolution geometric (HRG) sensor. The subsequent launch of Sentinel 2 presented an opportunity for data continuity to monitor the savannah woody cover, using equivalent 10 m resolution multispectral instrument (MSI) bands. This study examined the integration potential of Sentinel 2 MSI with the longer archive HRG and Landsat 8 (Land Satellite 8) Operational Land Imager (OLI) imagery, in assessing savannah woody cover. Images of three semi-arid savannah sites acquired on same season dates that excluded herbaceous vegetation from the spectral signature were used: November 2014 (HRG) and December 2015 (MSI, OLI). Using equivalent green (G), red (R), and near infrared (NIR) bands at 10 m (MSI, HRG) and 30 m (OLI) resolution, the woody cover was mapped through subpixel classification. The mapped woody cover was compared for statistical differences using chi(2) analysis at 10 m resolution (MSI, HRG) and at a degradation of the MSI and HRG images to the 30 m OLI pixel size. Conversion to top-of-atmosphere reflectance values facilitated inter-sensor correlation of G, R, and NIR reflectance for field sampling sites where woody cover was quantified. Inter-sensor regression functions in G, R, and NIR band MSI and HRG images were developed. The 10 m resolution classifications of woody cover were not statistically different. Due to spatial resolution similarity, SPOT 5 HRG multispectral imagery was established as suitable for integration with equivalent band MSI imagery in mapping the woody cover in a multitemporal analysis. For dense woody cover, Landsat 8 OLI imagery was more suitable for integration with MSI than HRG images due to higher radiometric sensitivity, which can permit monitoring physiology-related woody reflectance.

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