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- Title
Earth Observation and Biodiversity Big Data for Forest Habitat Types Classification and Mapping.
- Authors
Agrillo, Emiliano; Filipponi, Federico; Pezzarossa, Alice; Casella, Laura; Smiraglia, Daniela; Orasi, Arianna; Attorre, Fabio; Taramelli, Andrea; Coops, Nicholas
- Abstract
In the light of the "Biological Diversity" concept, habitats are cardinal pieces for biodiversity quantitative estimation at a local and global scale. In Europe EUNIS (European Nature Information System) is a system tool for habitat identification and assessment. Earth Observation (EO) data, which are acquired by satellite sensors, offer new opportunities for environmental sciences and they are revolutionizing the methodologies applied. These are providing unprecedented insights for habitat monitoring and for evaluating the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) indicators. This paper shows the results of a novel approach for a spatially explicit habitat mapping in Italy at a national scale, using a supervised machine learning model (SMLM), through the combination of vegetation plot database (as response variable), and both spectral and environmental predictors. The procedure integrates forest habitat data in Italy from the European Vegetation Archive (EVA), with Sentinel-2 imagery processing (vegetation indices time series, spectral indices, and single bands spectral signals) and environmental data variables (i.e., climatic and topographic), to parameterize a Random Forests (RF) classifier. The obtained results classify 24 forest habitats according to the EUNIS III level: 12 broadleaved deciduous (T1), 4 broadleaved evergreen (T2) and eight needleleaved forest habitats (T3), and achieved an overall accuracy of 87% at the EUNIS II level classes (T1, T2, T3), and an overall accuracy of 76.14% at the EUNIS III level. The highest overall accuracy value was obtained for the broadleaved evergreen forest equal to 91%, followed by 76% and 68% for needleleaved and broadleaved deciduous habitat forests, respectively. The results of the proposed methodology open the way to increase the EUNIS habitat categories to be mapped together with their geographical extent, and to test different semi-supervised machine learning algorithms and ensemble modelling methods.
- Subjects
ITALY; AIRBORNE lasers; SUPERVISED learning; BIG data; DECIDUOUS forests; RANDOM forest algorithms; HABITATS; MACHINE learning; FOREST biodiversity
- Publication
Remote Sensing, 2021, Vol 13, Issue 7, p1231
- ISSN
2072-4292
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.3390/rs13071231