Abstract

Abstract. A series of five land cover maps, widely known as COS (Carta de Uso e Ocupação do Solo), have been produced since 1990 for mainland Portugal. Previous to 2015, all maps were produced through photo-interpretation of orthophotos. Land cover and land use changes were detected through comparison of previous and recent orthophotos, which were used for map updating, thereby producing a new map. The remaining areas of no change were preserved across the maps for consistency. Despite the value of the maps produced, the method is very time-consuming and limited to the single-date reference of the orthophotos. From 2015 onwards, a new approach was adopted for map production. Photo-interpretation of orthophoto maps is still the basis of mapping, but assisted by products derived from satellite data. The goals are three-fold: (i) cut time production, (ii) increase map accuracy, and (iii) further detail the nomenclature. The last map published (COS 2015) benefited from change detection and classification analyses of Landsat data, namely for guiding the photo-interpretation in forest, shrublands, and mapping annual agriculture. Time production and map error have been reduced comparing to previous maps. The new 2018 map, currently in production, further explores this approach. Landsat 8 time series of 2015–2018 are used for change detection in vegetation based on NDVI differencing, thresholding and clustering. Sentinel-2 time series of 2017–2018 are used to classify Autumn/Winter crops and Spring/Summer crops based on NDVI temporal profiles and classification rules. Benefits and pitfalls of the new mapping approach are presented and discussed.

Highlights

  • The importance of land cover and land use (LCLU) has long been recognized, such as in environmental sciences and policy, and LCLU mapping is nowadays a well-established activity all over the world at a diversity of scales

  • The second accuracy assessment undertaken only with alerts in pathrow 204032 found 85% of the cases associated with vegetation loss, which corresponds to 15% commission error

  • The change detection method produced numerous alerts for false changes in vegetation cover, which are expressed by large commission error (51%) in the first accuracy assessment based on COS polygons

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Summary

Introduction

The importance of land cover and land use (LCLU) has long been recognized, such as in environmental sciences and policy, and LCLU mapping is nowadays a well-established activity all over the world at a diversity of scales. In Portugal, the national mapping agency, Direção-Geral do Território (DGT), produces and publishes a LCLU map for the continental territory, widely known as COS (Carta de Uso e Ocupação do Solo) (Figure 1). This map was first produced for the year of 1990 and updated for 1995, 2007, 2010, and 2015. COS for 2018 is under production and its publication is expected by the end of 2019. The uptake of COS is related to the fact that it is made available freely through an open data policy, and is the most detailed product of mainland Portugal in terms of thematic content and spatial representation

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