Abstract
Urmia Lake, which is the second largest permanent hypersaline lake in the world, is shrinking in recent decades. Since accurate spatial information about the lake is essential to managing the current and emerging crises of the lake, this study is used Urmia Lake satellite images time-series to investigate drought trends by analyzing via Artificial Neural Networks (ANN). The proposed approach is comprising the following four steps. First, yearly time-series Landsat images (2000-2022) are corrected geometrically and radiometrically. Then, time-series images of 2000-2020 are classified into five land cover classes, including; deep water, shallow water, salt, soil, and vegetation. In the third step, ANN trained for 2000-2019 as input and tested for 2020 as an output. Finally, the trained ANN is proposed to predict the future land covers of the lake (for 2021 and 2022 years). In order to evaluate the proposed model, the predicted maps of 2021 and 2022 were compared with their corresponding ground truth maps and quantitative criteria were calculated. The overall accuracy of the prediction for 2021 and 2022 is equal to 92.75% and 90.62%, respectively, which indicates the high capability of the proposed method for modeling and predicting changes in Urmia Lake and its shores.
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