Hyperspectral sensors as a management tool to prevent the invasion of the exotic cordgrass "Spartina densiflora" in the Doñana wetlands
Loading...
Publication date
Advisors
Department
Research group
Center
Abstract
We test the use of hyperspectral sensors for the early detection of the invasive denseflowered
cordgrass (Spartina densiflora Brongn.) in the Guadalquivir River marshes, Southwestern
Spain. We flew in tandem a CASI-1500 (368–1052 nm) and an AHS (430–13,000 nm) airborne
sensors in an area with presence of S. densiflora. We simplified the processing of hyperspectral
data (no atmospheric correction and no data-reduction techniques) to test if these treatments were
necessary for accurate S. densiflora detection in the area. We tested several statistical signal detection
algorithms implemented in ENVI software as spectral target detection techniques (matched filtering,
constrained energy minimization, orthogonal subspace projection, target-constrained interference
minimized filter, and adaptive coherence estimator) and compared them to the well-known spectral
angle mapper, using spectra extracted from ground-truth locations in the images. The target
S. densiflora was easy to detect in the marshes by all algorithms in images of both sensors. The best
methods (adaptive coherence estimator and target-constrained interference minimized filter) on the
best sensor (AHS) produced 100% discrimination (Kappa = 1, AUC = 1) at the study site and only
some decline in performance when extrapolated to a new nearby area. AHS outperformed CASI in
spite of having a coarser spatial resolution (4-m vs. 1-m) and lower spectral resolution in the visible
and near-infrared range, but had a better signal to noise ratio. The larger spectral range of AHS in
the short-wave and thermal infrared was of no particular advantage. Our conclusions are that it is
possible to use hyperspectral sensors to map the early spread S. densiflora in the Guadalquivir River
marshes. AHS is the most suitable airborne hyperspectral sensor for this task and the signal processing
techniques target-constrained interference minimized filter (TCIMF) and adaptive coherence estimator
(ACE) are the best performing target detection techniques that can be employed operationally with a
simplified processing of hyperspectral images.
Keywords
Invasive species; Doñana; Matched filtering; MF; Constrained energy minimization; CEM; Target-constrained interference-minimized filter; TCIMF; Spectral angle mapper; SAM; Orthogonal subspace projection; OSP; Adaptive coherence estimator; ACE; CASI; AHS; Hyperspectral imagery; Remote sensing; Spartina densiflora
Unesco Subjects
Bibliographic citation
Bustamante, J., Aragonés, D., Afán, I., Luque Palomo, C.J., Pérez Vázquez, A., Castellanos Verdugo, E.M., Díaz Delgado, C.: "Hyperspectral sensors as a management tool to prevent the invasion of the exotic cordgrass "Spartina densiflora" in the Doñana wetlands". Remote Sensing. Vol. 8, n. 12, (2016). DOI: 10.3390/rs8121001












