Abstract

Early-season crop mapping and information extraction is essential for crop growth monitoring and yield prediction, and it facilitates agricultural management and rapid response to agricultural disasters. However, training classifiers by remote sensing classification features for early crop prediction can be challenging, as early-season mapping can only use remote sensing image data during part of the crop growth period. In order to overcome this limitation, this study takes the Sanjiang Plain as an example to investigate the earliest identification time of rice, maize and soybean based on Sentinel-2 time-series data and the random forest classification algorithm. Crop information extraction was then performed. Following the analysis of the remote sensing classification features by the random forest importance approach and the subsequent normalization, the optimal features greater than or equal to 0.5 have yielded quite results in early crop mapping, and their overall accuracy was the highest in early-season mapping. The overall accuracy was observed to improve by 5% for 10 to 20 days of delay. In addition, rice, maize, and soybean were mapped at the irrigation transplanting period (10 May), jointing stage (9 July) and flowering (29 July), with an overall accuracy of 90.4%, 90.0% and 90.9%, respectively. This study shows that features suitable for early crop classification can be selected by random forest importance analysis as well as the ability of remote sensing to extract crop acreage information within the reproductive period.

Full Text
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