Abstract

ABSTRACTCircumboreal Canadian bogs and fens distinguished by differences in soils, hydrology, vegetation and morphological features were classified using combinations of Radarsat-2 synthetic aperture radar (SAR) quad-polarization data and Landsat-8 Operational Land Imager (OLI) spectral response patterns. Separate classifications were conducted using a traditional pixel-based maximum likelihood classifer and a machine learning algorithm following an object-based image analysis (OBIA). This study focused on two wetland classes with extensive coverage in the area (bog and fen). In the pixel-based maximum likelihood classification, accuracy increased from approximately 69% user’s accuracy and 79% producer’s accuracy using Radarsat-2 SAR data alone to approximately 80% user’s accuracy and 87% producer’s accuracy using Landsat-8 OLI data alone. Use of the Radarsat-2 SAR and Landsat-8 OLI data following principal components analysis (PCA) data fusion did not result in higher pixel-based maximum likelihood classification accuracy. In the object-based machine learning classification, higher bog and fen class accuracies were obtained when using Radarsat-2 and Landsat OLI data individually compared to the equivalent pixel-based classification. Subsequently, a PCA-data fusion product outperformed the individual bands of the Radarsat-2 and Landsat-8 imagery in object-based classification. Greater than 90% producer’s accuracy was obtained. The margin of error (MOE) was less than 5% in all classifications reported here. Further research will examine alternative data fusion techniques and the addition of Radarsat-2 SAR interferometric digital elevation model (DEM)-based geomorphometrics in object-based classification of different morphological types of bogs and fens.

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