Abstract

Background The success of satellites in mapping deforestation has been invaluable for improving our understanding of the impacts and nature of land cover change and carbon balance. However, current satellite approaches struggle to quantify the intensity of forest disturbance, i.e. whether the average rate of biomass loss for a region arises from heavy disturbance focused in a few locations, or the less severe disturbance of a wider area. The ability to distinguish between these, very different, disturbance regimes remains critical for forest managers and ecologists.ResultsWe put forward a framework for describing all intensities of forest disturbance, from deforestation, to widespread low intensity disturbance. By grouping satellite observations into ensembles with a common disturbance regime, the framework is able to mitigate the impacts of poor signal-to-noise ratio that limits current satellite observations. Using an observation system simulation experiment we demonstrate that the framework can be applied to provide estimates of the mean biomass loss rate, as well as distinguish the intensity of the disturbance. The approach is robust despite the large random and systematic errors typical of biomass maps derived from radar. The best accuracies are achieved with ensembles of ≥1600 pixels (≥1 km2 with 25 by 25 m pixels).SummaryThe framework we describe provides a novel way to describe and quantify the intensity of forest disturbance, which could help to provide information on the causes of both natural and anthropogenic forest loss—such information is vital for effective forest and climate policy formulation.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s13021-015-0039-0) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • The success of satellites in mapping deforestation has been invaluable for improving our understanding of the impacts and nature of land cover change and carbon balance

  • From a management and policy perspective it is important to be able to distinguish between the different intensities of biomass loss as they may be associated with different disturbances mechanisms [19]

  • High resolution biomass loss estimates could provide fine-scale estimates of forest degradation, but the current precision is not adequate and there is no immediate prospect of this changing, partly due to the speckle and other noise in Synthetic aperture radar (SAR) imagery [20]

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Summary

Introduction

The success of satellites in mapping deforestation has been invaluable for improving our understanding of the impacts and nature of land cover change and carbon balance. Remote sensing measurements would have a direct dependence on the quantity being estimated; current optical satellite derived estimates of forest disturbance are not able to achieve this ideal. Optical satellite measurements of forest disturbance rely on observing physical properties that are expected to correlate with disturbance (e.g. changes in leaf area that can be detected by satellites due to a change in the absorption in the chlorophyll spectral bands). When these correlations change, indirect measures cannot be expected to provide a robust estimate of disturbance

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