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METHOD

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INTRODUCTION FINAL SAMPLE METHOD ... ISPRS Journal of Photogrammetry & Remote Sensing 59: 369-376. Extract proportions of forest type from new FIA map. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: METHOD


1
A sample design for Landsat-based estimation of
national trends in forest disturbance and
regrowth
R. E. Kennedy 1, Cohen, W.B.1, Moisen, G.G.2,
Goward, S.N.3, Wulder, M.4, Powell, S.L1, Masek,
J.G.5, Huang, C.3, Healey, S.P.2
1 U.S.D.A. Forest Service, Pacific Northwest
Research Station, Corvallis, OR 97331 2 U.S.D.A.
Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station,
Ogden, UT 84401 3 Department of Geography,
University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742
4Canadian Forest Service, Pacific Forstry
Centre, Victoria, BC, Canada V8Z 1M5 5
Biospheric Sciences Branch, NASAs Goddard Space
Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD 20771
INTRODUCTION
FINAL SAMPLE
METHOD
Forest disturbance and recovery processes have
important impacts on carbon dynamics, but are
known to vary spatially by forest type and forest
ownership, as well as temporally by economic and
climatic condition. At a national scale, Landsat
data are ideal for capture of these spatial and
temporal variations because of their small grain
size, their spectral properties, and their
consistency over more than three decades.
Path/row
Path/row
  1. Tessellate WRS-2 Landsat scene to Thiessen Scene
    Areas (TSAs). See Gallego, F. J. 2005. Stratified
    sampling of satellite images with a systematic
    grid of points. ISPRS Journal of Photogrammetry
    Remote Sensing 59 369-376.
  2. Extract proportions of forest type from new FIA
    map.
  3. Develop eastern and western sample frames using
    only scenes gt2 cumulative forest cover (n 156
    East, n 122 West).

East
21/37
27/38
22/28
18/35
25/29
17/31
19/39
16/36
26/36
12/31
21/39
12/27
West
37/34
35/34
34/37
37/32
47/28
36/37
41/32
43/33
41/29
35/32
45/29
Final Sample
Landsat data therefore constitute the core of the
NASA funded project North American Forest
Disturbance and Regrowth since 1972 Empirical
Assessment with Field Measurements and Satellite
Remotely Sensed Observations. Biennial stacks
of Landsat images are being linked with field
measurements from the USDA Forest Services
Forest Inventory and Analysis (FIA) program to
develop dense temporal estimates of forest
dynamics for the past three decades in the 48
contiguous states. The challenges in processing
and analyzing imagery and FIA data in each scene
are considerable, however, making wall-to-wall
coverage impractical. Therefore, a sampling
approach is needed to for national-level
estimates of forest dynamics, with each Landsat
scene a single sample unit. This poster describes
our sampling approach.
Probabilities of inclusion for use in estimation
Example of TSAs for scenes in Maryland
FIA Forest type map with eastern and western
frames delineated
  1. For eastern and western frames separately, create
    100,000 randomized ordered lists of TSAs (ROTLs).
  2. Define the potential sample for each ROTL as the
    first n1.4 scenes, where n11 East and n9 West.
    This allows for future expansion. Calculate the
    following four criteria scores for each potential
    sample.

Criteria scores for potential sample scenes in
each ROTL
GOALS
The sampling approach must fulfill several
competing goals
  • Capture a diversity of forest types An ideal
    sample would capture the economic and ecological
    variation among forest types that leads to
    variation in disturbance and regrowth dynamics.
  • Minimize inclusion of scenes with little or no
    forest cover Each scene chosen for the sample
    will incur significant cost. Therefore, scenes
    with little or no forest cover are undesirable.
  • Disperse scenes spatially --Forest disturbance
    and regrowth patterns are likely to be spatially
    autocorrelated at a regional scale, arguing
    against adjacent sample scenes.
  • Encourage inclusion of several focal scenes
    Significant processing has already occurred on
    several image stacks in prior projects and in the
    startup phase of this project. Inclusion of these
    scenes would increase sample size at marginally
    increased cost.
  • Allow design-based estimation -- Design-based
    sampling allows estimation of national totals and
    errors from the samples alone, and is well
    understood as an unbiased approach for
    estimation.
  • Facilitate robust regression-based estimation
    --The rich temporal dynamics inferred from the
    biennial Landsat stacks complement wall-to-wall
    decadal estimates of disturbance from the LEDAPS
    project, but require that the sample scenes
    capture the full suite of disturbance regimes
    across the country.
  • Allow for future expansion of the sample
    Characterizing historical forest dynamics is of
    interest to other groups, and flexibility in
    sample design would allow collaboration on new
    sample scenes in the future.

DISCUSSION
Focal scenes
Two additional issues deserve discussion. When
MSS scenes are considered in image stacks,
look-up tables linking each WRS-2 scene to its
WRS-1 counterpart will be built, and
probabilities of inclusion mapped directly from
the existing probability of inclusion map. If a
given scene cannot be used, either for issues of
cloudiness or for lack of FIA data, then a
lookup-list will be constructed to locate the
scene closest in score to the missing scene.
  1. For each frame, rank 100,000 ROTLs for each
    criteria score, and filter out any ROTLs below
    rank cutoffs of 0.90, 0.60, 0.70, and 0.70 for
    the four critera listed above, respectively. This
    results in filtered set sizes of 542 for the east
    and 392 for the west.
  2. Re-rank sets according to forest diversity and
    forest area scores, add the two ranks, and
    re-sort ROTLs in order of descending total score.
  3. Identify smallest set of ranked ROTLs where each
    scene is included at least once. All scenes have
    non-zero probability, but less desirable scenes
    occur less frequently in final filtered set. For
    the east, this final set had 253 ROTLs. For the
    west, this set had 196 ROTLs.

Estimates of forest area disturbed and regrowing
will be calculated for each year for each scene
in the sample, and yearly estimates of national
disturbance and regrowth-rates estimated using
Horvitz-Thompson estimators. Separately, decadal
estimates of disturbance and regrowth will be
modeled as functions of yearly rates and other
geospatial data.
  • Pick one ROTL from the final list for each
    sampling frame. The ordered list of scenes is the
    final sample.
  • Calculate probabilities of inclusion for each
    scene as the proportion of ROTLs in the final set
    in which that scene occurs. These probabilities
    allow for unequal-probability, design-based
    estimation.

The sampling design balances several competing
goals. Design-based estimation is possible
because the final sample is drawn at random from
a set in which each scenes probability of
inclusion can be calculated. By confining this
set to ordered lists of scenes that disperse
scenes and capture forest diversity, we diminish
the potential effects of spatial autocorrelation
and increase the range of conditions sampled,
both of which improve the likelihood of robust
model-based estimation. Scoring for focal scene
inclusion and for high-forest-area scenes
improves cost-efficiency. The use of ordered
lists of scenes (ROTLs) allows for easy expansion
of the sample the next scene in the ordered list
is chosen, and the probabilities of inclusion
re-calculated for the larger sample size.
a)
b)
EXAMPLE Probabilities of inclusion when each of
the four criteria scores is considered
separately. Higher probability of inclusion is
shown in warm colors. a). Scene dispersion forces
scenes to edges of forested area. b). Forest
diversity scoring captures scenes with many
forest types. c). Forest area scoring captures
with high total forest cover. d). Focal scene
scoring preferentially includes scenes whose
additional cost of analysis and processing is
much less than new scenes.
c)
d)
Presented by Kennedy at the Joint Workshop on
NASA Biodiversity, Terrestrial Ecology, and
Related Applied Science, Adelphi, MD, August
21-25, 2006.
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