1 accuracy assessment methods and results for two satellite imagery derived landcover and landuse...

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Accuracy Assessment Methods and Accuracy Assessment Methods and Results for Two Satellite Imagery Results for Two Satellite Imagery Derived Landcover and Landuse Derived Landcover and Landuse

DatasetsDatasets

Raymond Crew - GIS Researcher and MS CandidateRaymond Crew - GIS Researcher and MS CandidateRick L. Day - Associate Professor Soil ScienceRick L. Day - Associate Professor Soil Science

Hanxing Pu - Penn State UniversityHanxing Pu - Penn State University

Image based on photo by Peggy Greb, USDA ARS (Richard Lowrance in foreground)

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• Part of a study to inventory the riparian land cover conditions for the Chesapeake Bay watershed

• Highlighting accuracy assessment of a GIS based riparian land cover inventory

Introduction

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• Largest estuary in the US

• Watershed covers 178,000 km2 and contains 464,000 km of stream banks and shorelines

• New York, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Delaware, Washington DC, West Virginia and Virginia

• 15 million residents growing to 18 million by 2020

The Chesapeake Bay Watershed

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• Collaborative group coordinating efforts to protect the ecological health of the Chesapeake Bay. Formed in 1983.

– Chesapeake Bay Commission– U.S. Environmental Protection Agency– Maryland– Virginia– Pennsylvania– District of Columbia

Chesapeake Bay Program Office

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• The Executive Council:– Governors of Maryland, Pennsylvania, and Virginia– Mayor of DC– Administrator of the EPA– Chair of the Chesapeake Bay Commission

• Issued a directive in 1994 asking the Chesapeake Bay Program Office to increase the focus on riparian stewardship, especially riparian forest buffers

Chesapeake Executive Council Directive on Riparian Buffers

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• Riparian buffers are area of vegetated land adjacent to streams, rivers, marshes or shorelines forming a transition between the land and water environments. (Vellidis and Lowrance, 2004) (Lowrance, Altier et. Al, 1995)

• Both forests and wetlands are effective buffers (EPA, 2005)

What are riparian buffers

photo David J. Welsch USDA

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• Reducing and Filtering Runoff• settles out sediments, nutrients and pesticides• increase infiltration rates• root systems stabilizing stream-banks and reduce erosion

• Nutrient Uptake• increases absorption of fertilizers and other pollutants by storing

bio-mass• de-nitrification via soil bacteria

• Canopy and Shade• moderate stream temperatures • leaf canopy filtering dust from wind erosion

• Habitat and Habitat Corridors

Why buffers are important

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Study Objectives

1. Develop an improved automated inventory method

2. Conduct an inventory for two time periods

3. Validate method to determine reliability

4. Study differences in buffer conditions by stream order

5. Study environmental pressures associated with land-use surrounding the riparian zones

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Automated Inventory

• Determine and collect the GIS datasets required for inventory acquire datasets

• land-cover• streams and water body polygons• watershed divides

• Calculate the inventory using an automated method• 100 and 300 foot buffers• stream miles – single sided and dual sided buffers• riparian miles

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Streams and Water Body Data

• Hybrid dataset produced by the USGS and Chesapeake Bay Program Office

• 1:24K Resolution National Hydrography Dataset (Higher Resolution NHD)

• 1:24K Reach files produced by the CBPO

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Land-cover Data

• Original plan:

• Have the Mid-Atlantic Regional Earth Science Applications Center (RESAC) produce a year 1990 and 2000 dataset using the same methods and type of imagery

• Unfortunately only a year 2000 dataset was produced

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Land-cover Near Dulles Airport

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2000 Land-cover Data

• Based on three year 2000 satellite images

• 30 meter resolution

• 21 land-cover and use classes - 4 pertinent to this study

• forest• urban forest• wetlands• water

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Solution

• Use the best available land-cover data available for the year 2000 and the year 1992

• 2000• Use the RESAC landcover/landuse data

• 1992• Use the Multi-Resolution Land Characteristics

(MRLC) landcover data. Commonly called the NLCD

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1992 MRLC Land-cover Data

• 18 land-cover classes in the Chesapeake Bay - 3 pertinent to this study

• forest• wetland• water

• based on primarily early 1990’s satellite images, however, some imagery as old as 1985 was used

• 30 meter resolution

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Problems Using These Two Datasets

• Different Methods uses to derive land-cover categories

• example: large differences between classification of open water vs. wetlands

• No urban forest category in the NLCD as in the RESAC

• unsure if urban forest will be classified as forest or as something else

• NLCD based on a wider temporal range of images

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The Sampling Process

1. Splits streams into 300’ (91.44 m) segments

2. Orients a transect perpendicular to each stream segment at the center of the segment

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Algorithm Outputs

3. Establishes sampling locations every 50 feet (15.24 m) along the transect

4. Collects the land-cover informationfrom the satellite imagery at each sample location

5. Calculates buffer statistics for each watershed

• Forest• Forest or urban forest• Forest, urban forest, or wetlands • Forest, urban forest, wetlands or water

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Riparian Buffer Algorithm

• Stream Miles• One or more sides buffered 100 feet or more• One or more sides buffered 300 feet or more• Both sides buffered 100 feet of more• Both sides buffered 300 feet or more

• Riparian Miles• Buffers of 100 feet or more• Buffers of 300 feet or more

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Statistics by

State

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Statistics by Watershed

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Year 2000 Inventory

Percent of streams with at least 100 feet of a forested buffer

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Validation Study

• Need to validate automated inventory method versus a traditional method to generate buffer inventories

• Must also test the reliability of land cover classifications in riparian zones

• Must validate and changes shown between the 1992 and 2000 inventories

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Validation Study

• Generate a forest land cover inventory using air photo interpretation

• Compare each air photo inventory to the same year automated inventory

• Compare the air photo inventories to each other

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Validation Study

• Randomly selected 50 locations throughout Chesapeake Bay Watershed

• Stratified to include all States and physiographic regions

• Used Hawth’s Analysis Tools 2.1 for ArcGIS

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Acquire Air Photos

• Purchase overlapping stereo sets of two or three photos from the National Aerial Photography Program (NAPP)– 9” by 9” prints grayscale prints– 1:40,000 scale– Flown every 5 to 7 years– Only $5 per print

• Two or three photos cover ¼ of the extent a standard USGS topographic map

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Air Photos

• Purchase two sets of photos, one centered near 2000 and the other near 1992

• Had to remove NY, no photos available later than 1998

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Scanning Stereoscope

• Used a scanning & magnifying stereoscope

• All photos work by one individual, Hanxing Pu

• His work compared for quality to another tech, Chihiro Mather

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• Coded every visible stream bank and waterbody outline into four classes

Red: Forest buffer exceeding 300’

Blue: Forest buffer between 100’ and 300’

Black: Forest buffer less than 100’

Yellow: No buffer visible

Photo Work

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Digitizing

• Next digitize all the buffers see via air photo work

• Can only be accomplished for those steams seen on the air photos and those in the digital data

• Any stream missing from one of the two sets is not compared

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Digitizing

• Removed the automated method results from the datasets to prevent any bias

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Results

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Thanks to:

• Dr. Anne Hairston-Strang – Maryland DNR Forest Service • J. Michael Foreman - Virginia Department of Forestry• Gene Odato - PA Bureau of Forestry • Sally Claggett - Chesapeake Bay Program Coordinator• Peter Claggett - Chesapeake Bay Program Office - USGS Land

Data Manager

• Dr. David Mortensen – Associate Professor of Weed Ecology • Dr. Doug Miller – Assistant Professor of Geography • Dr. Gary Petersen - Distinguished Prof of Soil Science

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