Publication | Open Access
Monitoring anthropogenic disturbance trends in an industrialized boreal forest with Landsat time series
33
Citations
28
References
2014
Year
Anthropogenic DisturbanceEnvironmental MonitoringEngineeringLand UseForestryChange DetectionLand CoverLand DegradationTerrestrial SensingChange AnalysisSocial SciencesLandsat Time SeriesForest MeteorologyIndustrialized BorealLandscape ProcessesForest HealthResource UtilizationGeographyAnthropogenic Disturbance TrendsLandscape ChangeForest Health MonitoringDeforestationLand Cover MapNatural Resource ManagementForest Resource ManagementRemote SensingHuman TransformationForest Inventory
Human transformation of the terrestrial biosphere via resource utilization is a critical impetus for monitoring and characterizing anthropogenic change to vegetation condition. The primary objective of this research was to detect anthropogenic forest disturbance for a recent Landsat time series. A novel combination of an autonomous change detection procedure and spectral classification scheme was applied and tested in a landscape that has undergone significant resource development over the last 30 years. Anthropogenic disturbance was detected with greater than 93% accuracy. Most disturbances were correctly classified as within ±1 year. The signal of anthropogenic disturbance was significant in the landscape, accounting for more than 91% of all disturbances and 86% of total disturbed area during the 23-year study period. The study demonstrated a robust approach for examining historical disturbance trends related to human-modification of the environment.
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