Abstract

Mangroves are ecosystems present in a large part of the Brazilian coastal zone that are home to a wide diversity of organisms, providing direct and indirect resources, as well as nursery and foraging habitats. Using images in 5-year intervals (2010, 2015, and 2020), the present study carried out a decadal mapping of the remaining mangroves of the Doce River delta along the tidal flats of the Mariricu River, in the coastal region of the city of São Mateus-ES. In this context, object-oriented classification methodology (GEOBIA) was used, which allowed the generation of high-resolution data. This methodology achieved excellent results, as evidenced by the global accuracy numbers and Kappa index, which gave an average of 96.78% and 93.5% respectively; and by low values of disagreement, with an average of 3.22%. The change detection analysis showed alterations in the landscape over time, with 9% of the mangrove areas becoming extinct, 12% of the areas expanding, and 79% of the areas remaining preserved. Therefore, our mapping data are consistent with the data published by the State Institute for the Environment and Water Resources of the State of Espírito Santo (IEMA), as well as with scientific works that recorded areas of reduction and expansion for mangroves, but mostly with large preserved areas. With that, our results demonstrate the highly effective application of geotechnologies for coastal environmental analyses with low cost and high speed.

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