Abstract

The study deals with the application of Google Earth Engine (GEE), Landsat data and ensemble-learning methods (ELMs) to map land cover (LC) change over a decade in the Kaski district of Nepal. As Nepal has experienced extensive changes due to natural and anthropogenic activities, monitoring such changes are crucial for understanding relationships and interactions between social and natural phenomena and to promote better decision-making. The main novelty lies in applying the XGBoost classifier for LC mapping over Nepal and monitoring the decadal changes of LC using ELMs. To map the LC change, a yearly cloud-free composite Landsat image was selected for the year 2010 and 2020. Combining the annual normalized difference vegetation index, normalized difference built-up index and modified normalized difference water index, with elevation and slope data from shuttle radar topography mission, supervised classification was performed using a random forest and extreme gradient boosting ELMs. Post classification change detection, validation and accuracy assessment were executed after the preparation of the LC maps. Three evaluation indices, namely overall accuracy (OA), Kappa coefficient, and F1 score from confusion matrix reports, were calculated for all the points used for validation purposes. We have obtained an OA of 0.8792 and 0.875 for RF and 0.8926 and 0.8603 for XGBoost at the 95% confidence level for 2010 and 2020 LC maps, which are better for mountainous terrain. The applied methodology could be significant in utilizing the big earth observation data and overcoming the traditional computational challenges using GEE. In addition, the quantification of changes over time would be helpful for decision-makers to understand current environmental dynamics in the study area.

Highlights

  • Nepal, a seismically active [1] and economically developing country [2], lies between India andChina

  • Nepal has seen rapid population growth and unplanned urbanization leading to many infrastructure developments from rural excavated roads to national highway projects [4,6]

  • The main novelty lies in applying the XGBoost classifier for land cover (LC) mapping over Nepal and monitoring the decadal changes of LC using ensemble-learning methods (ELMs) for mountainous terrain

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Summary

Introduction

A seismically active [1] and economically developing country [2], lies between India andChina. Many forest areas were converted to cultivation lands, and existing cultivation lands were converted to built-up areas. These alterations are causing undulations in river courses and patterns, further affecting the water quantity and quality of rivers [7,8,9,10,11]. All these natural and anthropogenic activities have altered the land cover (LC) rapidly in Nepal. Regular LC mapping and change detection is an utmost important task to maintain pace with these changes

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