Abstract
Understanding the spatial patterns of urban land use at both the macro and the micro levels is a central issue in global change studies. Due to the nonlinear features associated with land use spatial patterns, it is currently necessary to provide some distinct analysis methods to analyze them across a range of remote sensing imagery resolutions. The objective of our study is to quantify urban land use patterns from various perspectives using multidimensional fractal methods. Three commonly used fractal dimensions, i.e., the boundary dimension, the radius dimension, and the information entropy dimension, are introduced as the typical indices to examine the complexity, centrality and balance of land use spatial patterns, respectively. Moreover, a new lacunarity dimension for describing the degree of self-organization of urban land use at the macro level is presented. A cloud-free Landsat ETM+ image acquired on 17 September 2010 was used to extract land use information in Wuhan, China. The results show that there are significant linear relationships represented by good statistical fitness related to these four indices. The results indicate that rapid urbanization has substantially affected the urban landscape pattern, and different land use types show different spatial patterns in response. This analysis reveals that multiple fractal/nonfractal indices provides a more comprehensive understanding of the spatial heterogeneity of urban land use spatial patterns than any single fractal dimension index. These findings can help us to gain deeper insight into the complex spatial patterns of urban land use.
Highlights
Land use and cover change (LUCC) is one of the most profound human-induced alterations to theEarth’s surface [1,2,3,4,5,6]
The availability of land use spatio-temporal information derived from multi-resolution images of remote sensing satellites, such as Landsat, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Moderate resolution Imaging
For various remote sensors with different spatial resolutions, there are many case studies regarding the application of satellite-based remote sensing imagery that have demonstrated its good performance in assessing the spatial patterns of land use since 2000
Summary
Land use and cover change (LUCC) is one of the most profound human-induced alterations to theEarth’s surface [1,2,3,4,5,6]. Numerous studies have shown that remote sensing satellite imagery is the major data source for analyzing the spatial patterns of urban land use [7,8,9,10,11,12,13]. It is very important to provide some distinct analysis methods to characterize spatial patterns across a range of remote sensing imagery resolutions in land use studies. For various remote sensors with different spatial resolutions, there are many case studies regarding the application of satellite-based remote sensing imagery that have demonstrated its good performance in assessing the spatial patterns of land use since 2000.
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