Abstract

The availability of suitable habitat is a key predictor of the changing status of biodiversity. Quantifying habitat availability over large spatial scales is, however, challenging. Although remote sensing techniques have high spatial coverage, there is uncertainty associated with these estimates due to errors in classification. Alternatively, the extent of habitats can be estimated from ground‐based field survey. Financial and logistical constraints mean that on‐the‐ground surveys have much lower coverage, but they can produce much higher quality estimates of habitat extent in the areas that are surveyed. Here, we demonstrate a new combined model which uses both types of data to produce unified national estimates of the extent of four key habitats across Great Britain based on Countryside Survey and Land Cover Map. This approach considers that the true proportion of habitat per km2 (Zi) is unobserved, but both ground survey and remote sensing can be used to estimate Zi. The model allows the relationship between remote sensing data and Zi to be spatially biased while ground survey is assumed to be unbiased. Taking a statistical model‐based approach to integrating field survey and remote sensing data allows for information on bias and precision to be captured and propagated such that estimates produced and parameters estimated are robust and interpretable. A simulation study shows that the combined model should perform best when error in the ground survey data is low. We use repeat surveys to parameterize the variance of ground survey data and demonstrate that error in this data source is small. The model produced revised national estimates of broadleaved woodland, arable land, bog, and fen, marsh and swamp extent across Britain in 2007.

Highlights

  • | INTRODUCTIONTwo main approaches exist to extrapolate from a sub‐ sample of the area surveyed on the ground or to use remote sensing from satellites which can provide full census coverage

  • Addressing biodiversity loss is widely identified as a major envi‐ ronmental challenge of the 21st century (CBD, 2011)

  • Ground survey data came from the Countryside Survey (CS) of Great Britain (Brown et al, 2016; Norton et al, 2012), which is a nationwide assessment of stock and change of vegetation, soil, habitats, land‐ scape features, and freshwaters

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Two main approaches exist to extrapolate from a sub‐ sample of the area surveyed on the ground or to use remote sensing from satellites which can provide full census coverage. Remote sensing from satellites has an ad‐ vantage over ground‐based field surveys in that that the spatial distribution as well as the total area can be estimated thanks to its census coverage. The two available data sources to estimate national habitat cover fall into the categories of high ac‐ curacy, unbiased but low‐coverage information (on‐the‐ground assessment) and lower accuracy, potentially biased high‐coverage information (remote sensing). We present an approach to integrate data from remote sensing and ground survey within a single unified model to produce estimates of habitat extent at a national level for Great Britain.

| MATERIALS AND METHODS
| DISCUSSION
CONFLICT OF INTEREST
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