Abstract

Industrial forest plantations are expanding rapidly across Monsoon Asia and monitoring extent is critical for understanding environmental and socioeconomic impacts. In this study, new, multisensor imagery were evaluated and integrated to extract the strengths of each sensor for mapping plantation extent at regional scales. Two distinctly different landscapes with multiple plantation types were chosen to consider scalability and transferability. These were Tanintharyi, Myanmar and West Kalimantan, Indonesia. Landsat-8 Operational Land Imager (OLI), Phased Array L-band Synthetic Aperture Radar-2 (PALSAR-2), and Sentinel-1A images were fused within a Classification and Regression Tree (CART) framework using random forest and high-resolution surveys. Multi-criteria evaluations showed both L-and C-band gamma nought γ° backscatter decibel (dB), Landsat reflectance ρλ, and texture indices were useful for distinguishing oil palm and rubber plantations from other land types. The classification approach identified 750,822 ha or 23% of the Taninathryi, Myanmar, and 216,086 ha or 25% of western West Kalimantan as plantation with very high cross validation accuracy. The mapping approach was scalable and transferred well across the different geographies and plantation types. As archives for Sentinel-1, Landsat-8, and PALSAR-2 continue to grow, mapping plantation extent and dynamics at moderate resolution over large regions should be feasible.

Highlights

  • The expansion of industrial forest plantations is a critical driver of land cover land use changes in Monsoon Asia

  • The box and whisker plots showed the PALSAR-2 HV distribution having the most separation between plantation and forested pixels among the three sensors when using synthetic aperture radar (SAR) γbackscatter and optical ρλ reflectance observations

  • PALSAR-2 HV had lower backscatter values in both West Kalimantan and Myanmar for plantations compared to natural forest

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Summary

Introduction

The expansion of industrial forest plantations is a critical driver of land cover land use changes in Monsoon Asia. The Food And Agriculture Organization (FAO) estimated 187,086,000 hectares (ha) of forest plantation in 2000 with a rate of 4.5 million new ha/year from 1990 to 2000 [1]. 79% of the estimated total area was located in Asia. Forest plantations in this report were defined as having a minimum area of 0.5 ha, tree crown cover of at least 10 percent, and a total adult height above. A survey conducted by the FAO targeting major producing nations, following up on the Global Forest Resources Assessment, reported plantation extents of 103,728,000 ha and. The report described an augmented approach for data assimilation compared to the 2000 report (e.g., separating productive vs protective plantations)

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