Abstract
For proper forest management, accurate detection and mapping of burned areas are needed, yet the practice is difficult to perform due to the lack of an appropriate method, time, and expense. It is also critical to obtain accurate information about the density and distribution of burned areas in a large forest and vegetated areas. For the most efficient and up-to-date mapping of large areas, remote sensing is one of the best technologies. However, the complex image scenario and the similar spectral behavior of classes in multispectral satellite images may lead to many false-positive mistakes, making it challenging to extract the burned areas accurately. This research aims to develop an automated framework in the Google Earth Engine (GEE) cloud computing platform for detecting burned areas in Andika and Behbahan, located in the south and southwest of Iran, using Sentinel-2 time-series images. After importing the images and applying the necessary preprocessing, the Sentinel-2 Burned Areas Index (BAIS2) was used to create a map of the Primary Burned Areas (PBA). Detection accuracy was then improved by masking out disturbing classes (vegetation and water) on the PBA map, which resulted in Final Burned Areas (FBA). The unimodal method is used to calculate the ideal thresholds of indices to make the proposed method automatic. The final results demonstrated that the proposed method performed well in both homogeneous and heterogeneous areas for detecting the burned areas. Based on a test dataset, maps of burned areas were produced in the Andika and Behbahan regions with an overall accuracy of 90.11% and 92.40% and a kappa coefficient of 0.87 and 0.88, respectively, which were highly accurate when compared to the BAIS2, Normalized Burn Ratio (NBR), Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI), Mid-Infrared Bispectral Index (MIRBI), and Normalized Difference SWIR (NDSWIR) indices. Based on the results, accurate determination of vegetation classes and water zones and eliminating them from the map of burned areas led to a considerable increase in the accuracy of the obtained final map from the BAIS2 spectral index.
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