burned area mapping
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2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (24) ◽  
pp. 5138
Author(s):  
Seyd Teymoor Seydi ◽  
Mahdi Hasanlou ◽  
Jocelyn Chanussot

Wildfires are one of the most destructive natural disasters that can affect our environment, with significant effects also on wildlife. Recently, climate change and human activities have resulted in higher frequencies of wildfires throughout the world. Timely and accurate detection of the burned areas can help to make decisions for their management. Remote sensing satellite imagery can have a key role in mapping burned areas due to its wide coverage, high-resolution data collection, and low capture times. However, although many studies have reported on burned area mapping based on remote sensing imagery in recent decades, accurate burned area mapping remains a major challenge due to the complexity of the background and the diversity of the burned areas. This paper presents a novel framework for burned area mapping based on Deep Siamese Morphological Neural Network (DSMNN-Net) and heterogeneous datasets. The DSMNN-Net framework is based on change detection through proposing a pre/post-fire method that is compatible with heterogeneous remote sensing datasets. The proposed network combines multiscale convolution layers and morphological layers (erosion and dilation) to generate deep features. To evaluate the performance of the method proposed here, two case study areas in Australian forests were selected. The framework used can better detect burned areas compared to other state-of-the-art burned area mapping procedures, with a performance of >98% for overall accuracy index, and a kappa coefficient of >0.9, using multispectral Sentinel-2 and hyperspectral PRISMA image datasets. The analyses of the two datasets illustrate that the DSMNN-Net is sufficiently valid and robust for burned area mapping, and especially for complex areas.


2021 ◽  
Vol 264 ◽  
pp. 112575
Author(s):  
Qi Zhang ◽  
Linlin Ge ◽  
Ruiheng Zhang ◽  
Graciela Isabel Metternicht ◽  
Zheyuan Du ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 260 ◽  
pp. 112468
Author(s):  
Miguel A. Belenguer-Plomer ◽  
Mihai A. Tanase ◽  
Emilio Chuvieco ◽  
Francesca Bovolo

2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (13) ◽  
pp. 2492
Author(s):  
Jinxiu Liu ◽  
Eduardo Eiji Maeda ◽  
Du Wang ◽  
Janne Heiskanen

Accurate and efficient burned area mapping and monitoring are fundamental for environmental applications. Studies using Landsat time series for burned area mapping are increasing and popular. However, the performance of burned area mapping with different spectral indices and Landsat time series has not been evaluated and compared. This study compares eleven spectral indices for burned area detection in the savanna area of southern Burkina Faso using Landsat data ranging from October 2000 to April 2016. The same reference data are adopted to assess the performance of different spectral indices. The results indicate that Burned Area Index (BAI) is the most accurate index in burned area detection using our method based on harmonic model fitting and breakpoint identification. Among those tested, fire-related indices are more accurate than vegetation indices, and Char Soil Index (CSI) performed worst. Furthermore, we evaluate whether combining several different spectral indices can improve the accuracy of burned area detection. According to the results, only minor improvements in accuracy can be attained in the studied environment, and the performance depended on the number of selected spectral indices.


Author(s):  
Q. Zhang ◽  
Y. Xiao

Abstract. In the current situation of frequent forest fires, the study of forest burned area mapping is important. However, there is still room for improvement in the accuracy of existing forest burning area mapping methods. Therefore, in this paper, an unsupervised method based on fire index enhancement and GRNN (General Regression Neural Network) is proposed for automated forest burned area mapping from single-date post-fire remote sensing imagery. The proposed method first uses adaptive spatial context information to enhance the generated fire index to improve its ability to indicate the burned areas. Then the uncertainty analysis is performed on the enhanced fire index to extract reliable burned samples and non-burned samples for subsequent classifier training. Finally, the improved GRNN model considering the spatial correlation of pixels is used as a classifier to binarize the enhanced fire index to generate the final burned area map. Based on two commonly used fire indexes, NBR (Normalized Burn Ratio) and BAI (Burned Area Index), this paper conducts burned area mapping experiments on a post-fire image of a forest area in Inner Mongolia, China to test the effectiveness of the proposed method, and two commonly used threshold methods (Otsu and Kmeans clustering) are also used to conduct burned area mapping based on threshold segmentation of fire index for comparison experiments. The experimental results prove the effectiveness and superiority of the proposed method. The proposed method is unsupervised and automated, so it has high application value and potential under the current situation of frequent forest fires.


2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (4) ◽  
pp. 816
Author(s):  
Ekhi Roteta ◽  
Aitor Bastarrika ◽  
Magí Franquesa ◽  
Emilio Chuvieco

Four burned area tools were implemented in Google Earth Engine (GEE), to obtain regular processes related to burned area (BA) mapping, using medium spatial resolution sensors (Landsat and Sentinel-2). The four tools are (i) the BA Cartography tool for supervised burned area over the user-selected extent and period, (ii) two tools implementing a BA stratified random sampling to select the scenes and dates for validation, and (iii) the BA Reference Perimeter tool to obtain highly accurate BA maps that focus on validating coarser BA products. Burned Area Mapping Tools (BAMTs) go beyond the previously implemented Burned Area Mapping Software (BAMS) because of GEE parallel processing capabilities and preloaded geospatial datasets. BAMT also allows temporal image composites to be exploited in order to obtain BA maps over a larger extent and longer temporal periods. The tools consist of four scripts executable from the GEE Code Editor. The tools’ performance was discussed in two case studies: in the 2019/2020 fire season in Southeast Australia, where the BA cartography detected more than 50,000 km2, using Landsat data with commission and omission errors below 12% when compared to Sentinel-2 imagery; and in the 2018 summer wildfires in Canada, where it was found that around 16,000 km2 had burned.


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