Abstract

Abstract Tropical forest assessment using data from the Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer (AVHRR) may lead to inaccurate estimates of forest cover in regions of small subpixel forest or non-forest patches and in regions where the pattern of clearance is particularly convoluted. Test sites typifying these two patterns were chosen in Ghana and Rondonia, respectively. To capture the subpixel proportions of forest cover, a linear mixture model was applied to two AVHRR test images over the test sites. The model produced image outputs in which pixel intensities indicated the proporton of forest cover per km2. For comparison, supervised maximum likelihood classifications were also performed. The outputs were assessed against classified Landsat TM scenes, converted to proportions maps and coregistered to the AVHRR images. An empirical method was applied for determining the critical forest cover per km2 needed for an AVHRR pixel to be classified as forest. The critical values exceeded 50 per cent, indicating a tendency for AVHRR classification to underestimate forest cover. This was confirmed by comparing estimates of total forest cover obtained from the AVHRR and TM classifications. In the case of Ghana, a more accurate estimate of forest cover was obtained from the AVHRR mixture model than from the classification. Both mixture model outputs were found to be well correlated with those from Landsat TM. Further work should test the robustness of the approach adopted here when applied to much larger areas.

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