Abstract

The U.S. Geological Survey has produced the Landsat Burned Area Essential Climate Variable (BAECV) product for the conterminous United States (CONUS), which provides wall-to-wall annual maps of burned area at 30 m resolution (1984–2015). Validation is a critical component in the generation of such remotely sensed products. Previous efforts to validate the BAECV relied on a reference dataset derived from Landsat, which was effective in evaluating the product across its timespan but did not allow for consideration of inaccuracies imposed by the Landsat sensor itself. In this effort, the BAECV was validated using 286 high-resolution images, collected from GeoEye-1, QuickBird-2, Worldview-2 and RapidEye satellites. A disproportionate sampling strategy was utilized to ensure enough burned area pixels were collected. Errors of omission and commission for burned area averaged 22 ± 4% and 48 ± 3%, respectively, across CONUS. Errors were lowest across the western U.S. The elevated error of commission relative to omission was largely driven by patterns in the Great Plains which saw low errors of omission (13 ± 13%) but high errors of commission (70 ± 5%) and potentially a region-growing function included in the BAECV algorithm. While the BAECV reliably detected agricultural fires in the Great Plains, it frequently mapped tilled areas or areas with low vegetation as burned. Landscape metrics were calculated for individual fire events to assess the influence of image resolution (2 m, 30 m and 500 m) on mapping fire heterogeneity. As the spatial detail of imagery increased, fire events were mapped in a patchier manner with greater patch and edge densities, and shape complexity, which can influence estimates of total greenhouse gas emissions and rates of vegetation recovery. The increasing number of satellites collecting high-resolution imagery and rapid improvements in the frequency with which imagery is being collected means greater opportunities to utilize these sources of imagery for Landsat product validation.

Highlights

  • The Global Climate Observing System (GCOS) program identifies fire disturbance as one of the high priority Essential Climate Variables (ECV) [1]

  • Essential Climate Variable (BAECV) product for the conterminous United States (CONUS) which capitalizes on the continuous record and moderate spatial resolution provided by the Landsat satellites to provide wall-to-wall maps of burned areas across CONUS (1984–2015) at 30 m resolution [10]

  • The Burned Area Essential Climate Variable (BAECV) had a consistent bias in over-estimating burned area extent in the other three ecoregions (Great Plains, Arid West and Mountain West)

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Summary

Introduction

The Global Climate Observing System (GCOS) program identifies fire disturbance as one of the high priority Essential Climate Variables (ECV) [1]. The U.S Geological Survey (USGS) has developed a Burned Area. Essential Climate Variable (BAECV) product for the conterminous United States (CONUS) which capitalizes on the continuous record and moderate spatial resolution provided by the Landsat satellites to provide wall-to-wall maps of burned areas across CONUS (1984–2015) at 30 m resolution [10]. Providing a burned area record for longer time spans at finer spatial resolutions can improve our ability to discern temporal trends [13], relationships with climate and other drivers [14,15,16], as well as detect smaller fires and map fire heterogeneity [17]. The BAECV was initially validated using an independent dataset derived from

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