Abstract

Oil palm is recognized as a golden crop, as it produces the highest oil yield among oil seed crops. Malaysia is the world’s second largest producer of palm oil; 16% of its land is planted with oil palm. To cope with the ever-increasing global demand on edible oil, additional areas of oil palm are forecast to increase globally by 12 to 19 Mha by 2050. Multisensor remote sensing plays an important role in providing relevant, timely, and accurate information that can be developed into a plantation monitoring system to optimize production and sustainability. The aim of this study was to simultaneously exploit the synthetic aperture radar ALOS PALSAR 2, a form of microwave remote sensing, in combination with visible (red) data from Landsat Thematic Mapper to obtain a holistic view of a plantation. A manipulation of the horizontal–horizontal (HH) and horizontal–vertical (HV) polarizations of ALOS PALSAR data detected oil palm trees and water bodies, while the red spectra L-band from Landsat data (optical) could effectively identify built up areas and vertical–horizontal (VH) polarization from Sentinel C-band data detected bare land. These techniques produced an oil palm area classification with overall accuracies of 98.36% and 0.78 kappa coefficient for Peninsular Malaysia. The total oil palm area in Peninsular Malaysia was estimated to be about 3.48% higher than the value reported by the Malaysian Palm Oil Board. The over estimation may be due the MPOB’s statistics that do not include unregistered small holder oil palm plantations. In this study, we were able to discriminate most of the rubber areas.

Highlights

  • Oil palm plantation is among the world’s largest agricultural plantation and it is expected to grow even more in the future [1]

  • We found our technique overestimated some oil palm areas, our technique generally identified oil palm well compared to the land use map produced by the Department of Agriculture, Peninsular Malaysia

  • Classifying oil palm and knowing its geographical distribution is essential to demarcating the oil palm from other nearby land covers such as forest, other vegetation, buildings, and bare land, as well as for the accurate estimation of oil palm area coverage

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Summary

Introduction

Oil palm plantation is among the world’s largest agricultural plantation and it is expected to grow even more in the future [1]. High demand for palm oil products throughout the world has led to the expansion of oil palm plantations in Malaysia [2]. 5.4 Mha or 16.4% of the total land area of Malaysia has been planted with oil palm. Malaysia is the second largest oil palm producer in the world after Indonesia. The palm oil industry predominantly contributes to the production of biomass in Malaysia with 80 Mt generated in 2015 and it is further expected to increase to 100 Mt by 2020 [5]

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