ReCuSum: A polyvalent method to monitor tropical forest disturbances
Language
en
Article de revue
This item was published in
ISPRS Journal of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing. 2023-09, vol. 203, p. 358-372
Elsevier
English Abstract
Change detection methods based on Earth Observations are increasingly used to monitor rainforest in the intertropical band. Until recently, deforestation monitoring was mainly based on remotely sensed optical images which ...Read more >
Change detection methods based on Earth Observations are increasingly used to monitor rainforest in the intertropical band. Until recently, deforestation monitoring was mainly based on remotely sensed optical images which often face limitations in humid tropical areas due to frequent cloud coverage. This leads to late detections of disturbance events. Since the launch of Sentinel-1 acquiring images with a revisit time of 12 days and a spatial resolution of 5 x 20 m in Brazil, Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) images have been increasingly used to monitor deforestation. In this study, we propose a multitemporal version of the change detection method we previously applied to timeseries of Sentinel-1 SAR images, to monitor deforestation/degradation in the Congo rainforest. Our approach is based on a Cumulative Sum (CuSum) method combined with a spatial recombination of Critical Thresholds (CuSum cross-Tc). The newly developed multitemporal CuSum method (ReCuSum) was applied to a time-series of 82 dual polarization (VH, VV) Ground Range Detected (GRD) Sentinel-1 images acquired in the Para State, in the Brazilian Amazonia, from 29/09/2016 to 01/07/2019. The ReCuSum method consists of iteratively applying the CuSum cross-Tc to monitor multiple changes in a time-series by splitting the time-series at each date of detected change and by independently iterating over the time periods resulting from the splits. The number of changes in the time-series was then analysed according to the vegetation type (Forest, non-forest vegetation) determined by visual inspection of optical Sentinel-2 image and PlanetScope monthly mosaic. This showed a difference between non-forest vegetation and forested areas. A threshold based on the number of changes (Tnbc) was then developed to differentiate forest from non-forest disturbances. The ability to monitor non-forest vegetation was analysed: the CuSum cross-Tc detected up to 90% of the total non-forest vegetation area over the study region in the past period. After removing past disturbances and past non-forest vegetation, then removing the pixels covered with non-forest vegetations based on Tnbc, the application of the ReCuSum led to a precision of 81%, a recall of 68%, a kappa coefficient of 0.72 and a F1-score of 0.74 in forest disturbance monitoring. According to these results, ReCuSum applied to Sentinel-1 time-series of images can be used for efficient forest disturbance monitoring and for generating a forest / non-forest map after the application of newly developed post-processing steps. Sentinel-1 imagery can be used for both Forest / Non-forest mapping and for forest disturbance detection. ReCuSum was released as an open-source GIT project available at: https://forgemia. inra.fr/bertrand.ygorra/cusum-deforestation_monitoring.Read less <
English Keywords
Remote Sensing
Sentinel-1
Cumulative Sum Algorithm
Tropical Deforestation
Multiple Change Detection
Forest/Non-Forest
map
Origin
Hal imported