Abstract

Sago palm (Metroxylon sagu) is a palm tree species originating in Indonesia. In the future, this starch-producing tree will play an important role in food security and biodiversity. Local governments have begun to emphasize the sustainable development of sago palm plantations; therefore, they require near-real-time geospatial information on palm stands. We developed a semi-automated classification scheme for mapping sago palm using machine learning within an object-based image analysis framework with Pleiades-1A imagery. In addition to spectral information, arithmetic, geometric, and textural features were employed to enhance the classification accuracy. Recursive feature elimination was applied to samples to rank the importance of 26 input features. A support vector machine (SVM) was used to perform classifications and resulted in the highest overall accuracy of 85.00% after inclusion of the eight most important features, including three spectral features, three arithmetic features, and two textural features. The SVM classifier showed normal fitting up to the eighth most important feature. According to the McNemar test results, using the top seven to 14 features provided a better classification accuracy. The significance of this research is the revelation of the most important features in recognizing sago palm among other similar tree species.

Highlights

  • Sago palm is a highly valuable plant but is not well known

  • The overall accuracy (OA) of four-band classification can only reach 83%; the addition of textural, arithmetical, and geometrical features increases the OA to 85%

  • The producer’s accuracy (PA) of sago palm was lower than that including other features (80% vs. 88%, respectively)

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Summary

Introduction

Sago palm is a highly valuable plant but is not well known. This palm is one of the most promising underutilized food crops in the world, but has received very little attention or study [1]. According to Abbas [5], Indonesia has the largest area of sago palm forest and cultivation worldwide, as confirmed by Bintoro [6], who stated that 85% of all sago (5.5 million ha) is distributed in Indonesia. Flach [2] roughly estimated that wild stands and (semi)-cultivated stands with good sago palm coverage occupy 2.49 million ha worldwide. Various reports provide different growing areas and percent coverage estimates

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