Abstract

• - Vegetation mapped from simulated AVIRIS-NG image offers greater details and accuracy. • − 33% improvement in the new vegetation map accuracy. • - A novel approach to generate improved vegetation maps for Alaska’s boreal domain. Detailed vegetation maps are one of the primary inputs for forest and wildfire management. Hyperspectral remote sensing is a proven technique for detailed and accurate vegetation mapping. However, the availability of recent hyperspectral imagery in Alaska is limited because of the logistics and high cost involved in its acquisition. In this study, we simulated AVIRIS-NG (Airborne Visible InfraRed Imaging Spectrometer - Next Generation) hyperspectral data from widely available Sentinel-2 multispectral data using the Universal Pattern Decomposition Method (UPDM). The UPDM is a spectral unmixing technique that uses detailed ground spectra of vegetation classes and the Spectral Response Functions of AVIRIS-NG and Sentinel-2 sensors to simulate imagery with the same number of bands and spectral resolution as an AVIRIS-NG image. We simulated three images (each covering an area of 100 km × 100 km) from two ecoregions to test portability of the approach. We collected ground spectra of vegetation and bare ground during summers (2019–2021) using a PSR+ 3500 hand-held spectroradiometer and created a spectral library for this study. The Iterative Endmember Selection (IES) algorithm was used to optimize the spectral library and to select the most representative endmembers for simulation: birch, spruce, and gravel. We validated the simulated hyperspectral imagery by comparing it with available AVIRIS-NG images. The simulated image was visually and spectrally similar to the AVIRIS-NG image (RMSE of 0.03 and 0.02 for birch and spruce spectra, respectively). We applied the Random Forest image classification model to derive detailed vegetation maps from the simulated images. Our vegetation map showed an improvement of 33% in the map accuracy compared to the LANDFIRE EVT map. This study demonstrated an efficient and cost-effective approach to derive detailed vegetation maps at the Sentinel scene scale by simulating hyperspectral images in Google’s cloud environment. It offers a novel pathway to generate detailed vegetation and fuel maps for the whole boreal region of Alaska to aid effective forest and fire management.

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