Abstract

ABSTRACTIn this study, the sensitivity of multi-polarization synthetic aperture radar (SAR) features to vegetation cover is investigated over a test case of environmental importance: the Coiba National Park, Panama. Single-polarization intensity features and polarimetric features derived from the eigenvalue/eigenvector decomposition are analysed and their classification performance, evaluated against a reference land-cover map using a simple clustering algorithm, is contrasted with conventional optical features.Experiments, undertaken using actual L-band full-polarimetric SAR and Landsat data, show that (a) polarimetric information plays a key role in improving the classification accuracy with some polarimetric features performing better than single-polarization and optical ones, (b) classification performance of radar features is significantly affected by incidence angles, and (c) a joint use of different radar features is expected to increase classification accuracy.

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