Abstract
This study was an evaluation of the spectral signature generalization properties of coral across four remote Pacific Ocean reefs. The sites under consideration have not been the subject of previous studies for coral classification using remote sensing data. Previous research regarding using remote sensing to identify reefs has been limited to in-situ assessment, with some researchers also performing temporal analysis of a selected area of interest. This study expanded the previous in-situ analyses by evaluating the ability of a basic predictor, Linear Discriminant Analysis (LDA), trained on Depth Invariant Indices calculated from the spectral signature of coral in one location to generalize to other locations, both within the same scene and in other scenes. Three Landsat 8 scenes were selected and masked for null, land, and obstructed pixels, and corrections for sun glint and atmospheric interference were applied. Depth Invariant Indices (DII) were then calculated according to the method of Lyzenga and an LDA classifier trained on ground truth data from a single scene. The resulting LDA classifier was then applied to other locations and the coral classification accuracy evaluated. When applied to ground truth data from the Palmyra Atoll location in scene path/row 065/056, the initial model achieved an accuracy of 80.3%. However, when applied to ground truth observations from another location within the scene, namely, Kingman Reef, it achieved an accuracy of 78.6%. The model was then applied to two additional scenes (Howland Island and Baker Island Atoll), which yielded an accuracy of 69.2% and 71.4%, respectively. Finally, the algorithm was retrained using data gathered from all four sites, which produced an overall accuracy of 74.1%.
Highlights
Coral reefs are among the most complex and diverse ecosystems in the world [1]
We obtained corresponding ground truth labels for a sampling of coral and non-coral pixels for each location
A classifier was trained using linear discriminant analysis to predict the presence of coral
Summary
Coral reefs are among the most complex and diverse ecosystems in the world [1]. these delicate ecosystems are under extreme threat due to numerous environmental and anthropogenic forces. Coral environments are often heterogeneous, exhibiting a complex mixture of bottom types within a single pixel This poses further challenges when using remote sensing data to detect coral’s characteristics, such as the diversity and cover of coral species within each pixel according to the resolution available from a given spectrometer. These factors weaken the ability of a classifier to accurately determine the existence of coral. This is because satellites equipped with lower resolution spectrometers will tend to capture more heterogeneity within each pixel, and in turn deliver more mixed information regarding spectral reflectance to the classifier
Published Version (Free)
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have