Abstract

Tropical environments present a unique challenge for optical time series analysis, primarily owing to fragmented data availability, persistent cloud cover and atmospheric aerosols. Additionally, little is known of whether the performance of time series change detection is affected by diverse forest types found in tropical dry regions. In this paper, we develop a methodology for mapping forest clearing in Southeast Asia using a study region characterised by heterogeneous forest types. Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) time series are decomposed using Breaks For Additive Season and Trend (BFAST) and breakpoints, trend, and seasonal components are combined in a binomial probability model to distinguish between cleared and stable forest. We found that the addition of seasonality and trend information improves the change model performance compared to using breakpoints alone. We also demonstrate the value of considering forest type in disturbance mapping in comparison to the more common approach that combines all forest types into a single generalised forest class. By taking a generalised forest approach, there is less control over the error distribution in each forest type. Dry-deciduous and evergreen forests are especially sensitive to error imbalances using a generalised forest model i.e., clearances were underestimated in evergreen forest, and overestimated in dry-deciduous forest. This suggests that forest type needs to be considered in time series change mapping, especially in heterogeneous forest regions. Our approach builds towards improving large-area monitoring of forest-diverse regions such as Southeast Asia. The findings of this study should also be transferable across optical sensors and are therefore relevant for the future availability of dense time series for the tropics at higher spatial resolutions.

Highlights

  • Forests provide many important regional to global ecosystem services including biodiversity [1,2], water supply [3], climate regulation [4], and carbon storage [5,6,7]

  • Our results suggest that accounting for forest type can improve forest clearance mapping in areas characterised by diverse forest types such as Southeast Asia

  • This study demonstrates how combining break magnitude, trend, and seasonal components can improve forest clearance mapping when compared to using just the break magnitude alone

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Summary

Introduction

Forests provide many important regional to global ecosystem services including biodiversity [1,2], water supply [3], climate regulation [4], and carbon storage [5,6,7]. Monitoring forest cover and associated changes over time has become a key component of many environmental management strategies, including Reduced Emission from Deforestation and Forest Degradation. Important has been the coinciding progression in methodologies used to monitor forest and change dynamics. Earlier approaches that largely focused on bi-temporal change analysis [9,10] are being superseded by advanced methods taking a more dense time-series approach [11,12,13,14,15]

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