Abstract

Over the last 18 years, Indonesia has experienced significant deforestation due to the expansion of oil palm and rubber plantations. Accurate land cover maps are essential for policymakers to track and manage land change to support sustainable forest management and investment decisions. An automatic digital processing (ADP) method is currently used to develop land cover change maps for Indonesia, based on optical imaging (Landsat). Such maps produce only forest and non-forest classes, and often oil palm and rubber plantations are misclassified as native forests. To improve accuracy of these land cover maps, this study developed oil palm and rubber plantation discrimination indices using the integration of Landsat-8 and synthetic aperture radar Sentinel-1 images. Sentinel-1 VH and VV difference (>7.5 dB) and VH backscatter intensity were used to discriminate oil palm plantations. A combination of Landsat-8 NDVI, NDMI with Sentinel-1 VV and VH were used to discriminate rubber plantations. The improved map produced four land cover classes: native forest, oil palm plantation, rubber plantation, and non-forest. High-resolution SPOT 6/7 imagery and ground truth data were used for validation of the new classified maps. The map had an overall accuracy of 92%; producer’s accuracy for all classes was higher than 90%, except for rubber (65%), and user’s accuracy was over 80% for all classes. These results demonstrate that indices developed from a combination of optical and radar images can improve our ability to discriminate between native forest and oil palm and rubber plantations in the tropics. The new mapping method will help to support Indonesia’s national forest monitoring system and inform monitoring of plantation expansion.

Highlights

  • IntroductionThe increasing global demand for agricultural products has driven the rapid expansion of oil palm and rubber plantations

  • Introduction published maps and institutional affilThe increasing global demand for agricultural products has driven the rapid expansion of oil palm and rubber plantations

  • These results demonstrate that indices developed from a combination of optical and radar images can improve our ability to discriminate between native forest and oil palm and rubber plantations in the tropics

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Summary

Introduction

The increasing global demand for agricultural products has driven the rapid expansion of oil palm and rubber plantations. Considerable areas of native forest have been converted to agricultural land use. 9.2 Mha of native forest loss was due to plantation expansion [2]. This native forest clearing has adversely impacted ecosystems, biodiversity, and the terrestrial carbon cycle [3,4]. Among the remote sensing data used, optical images such as those recorded by the Landsat satellites have been important in supporting long-term forest monitoring of land cover change (>40 years) [6,7,8].

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