Remote sensing for ecology and conservation: a handbook of techniques (Oxford, 2010). - ОГЛАВЛЕНИЕ / CONTENTS
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ОбложкаRemote sensing for ecology and conservation: a handbook of techniques / N.Horning et al. - Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2010. - xxvi, 467 p.: ill. (chiefly col.). - (Techniques in ecology and conservation series). - Ref.: p.416-450. - Ind.: p.451-467. - ISBN 978-0-19-921994-0
 

Оглавление / Contents
 
Preface ........................................................ xv
Acronyms List ............................................... xviii
Acknowledgments .............................................. xxii
Abbreviations ............................................... xxiii

Part I  Getting started: remote sensing fundamentals

1  Introduction: Why ecologists and conservation biologists
   use remote sensing ........................................... 3
   1.1  Our aims and objectives ................................. 3
   1.2  Why remote sensing tools are important .................. 4
        1.2.1  Observation ...................................... 4
        1.2.2  Analysis and measurement ......................... 6
        1.2.3  Mapping .......................................... 8
        1.2.1  Monitoring over time and space ................... 8
        1.2.2  Decision support ................................. 9
   1.3  Organization of the book ................................ 9
        1.3.1  Getting started: remote sensing fundamentals ..... 9
        1.3.2  Ecological systems and processes ................ 10
        1.3.2  Putting it into practice: conservation
               applications .................................... 12
        1.3.3  Appendices ...................................... 14
   1.4  Remote sensing: a technology in development ............ 14

2  When to use remote sensing .................................. 15
   2.1  Physical and practical limitations of remotely sensed
        imagery ................................................ 15
        2.7.1  Resolution ...................................... 16
        2.7.2  Working at different scales: practical and
               conceptual limitations .......................... 23
        2.7.3  Using remote sensing to study social
               phenomena ....................................... 25
   2.2  Accuracy ............................................... 25
        2.2.1  Types of error .................................. 25
        2.2.2  Defining acceptable accuracy .................... 27
        2.2.3  Measuring and reporting accuracy ................ 28
        2.2.4  Understanding accuracy statistics ............... 30
        2.2.5  Trends in accuracy assessment ................... 31
   2.3  Assessing in-house capabilities (institutional
        limitations) ........................................... 32
        2.3.1  Doing work in-house or contracting out .......... 33
        2.3.2  Training ........................................ 33
        2.3.3  Finding a good remote sensing consultant ........ 35
   2.4  Summary ................................................ 35

3  Working with images ......................................... 37
   3.1  Choosing the right type of imagery ..................... 39
        3.1.1  Multispectral imaging ........................... 39
        3.7.1  Spatial resolution and scale .................... 40
        3.7.2  Temporal options: seasonality and frequency of
               acquisitions .................................... 46
        3.7.3  Requesting imagery .............................. 46
        3.7.4  Making the decision ............................. 47
   3.2  Software options ....................................... 48
        3.2.1 Graphics software ................................ 48
        3.2.2  GIS software .................................... 48
        3.2.3  Specialized remote sensing software ............. 49
        3.2.4  Mathematical and visualization software ......... 49
        3.2.5  Deciding which software to use .................. 49
   3.3  Visualizing the data ................................... 50
        3.3.1 Combining bands to make a color composite ........ 50
        3.3.2  Image enhancements .............................. 50
        3.3.3  Image sharpening with a panchromatic band ....... 53
        3.3.4  Three-dimensional viewing ....................... 57
   3.4  Additional processing .................................. 59
        3.4.1 Radiometric processing ........................... 59
        3.4.2  Reflectance: the holy grail of remote sensing ... 60
        3.4.3  Geometric processing ............................ 62
   3.5  Image interpretation and classification ................ 64
        3.5.1 Visual interpretation ............................ 65
        3.5.2  Image classification ............................ 67
        3.5.3  Accuracy assessment ............................. 78
   3.6  Summary ................................................ 78

Part II Ecological systems and processes

4  Measuring and monitoring land cover, land use, and
   vegetation characteristics .................................. 81
   4.1  Land cover classification .............................. 81
        4.1.1  Land cover versus land use ...................... 81
        4.1.2  Options for output products ..................... 82
        4.1.3  Comparing land cover maps with image
               photoproducts ................................... 83
        4.1.4  Getting started ................................. 84
        4.1.5  Requirements for creating a land cover
               classification map .............................. 84
        4.1.6  Define the study area ........................... 85
        4.1.7  Defining a classification scheme ................ 86
        4.1.8  Selecting imagery ............................... 88
        4.1.9  Image preprocessing ............................. 88
        4.1.10 Ancillary data .................................. 90
        4.1.11 Classification methods .......................... 90
        4.1.12 Field validation ................................ 91
        4.1.13 Accuracy assessment ............................. 91
        4.1.14 Using the completed map ......................... 91
   4.2  Monitoring land cover change ........................... 92
        4.2.1  Reasons for mapping land cover change ........... 92
        4.2.2  Monitoring changes in forest cover .............. 93
        4.2.3  Visual methods for monitoring land cover
               change .......................................... 93
        4.2.4  Selecting a change detection method ............. 95
        4.2.5  Dealing with different data sources ............ 101
        4.2.6  Data normalization ............................. 103
        4.2.7  Validating change detection results ............ 104
        4.2.8  Planning a land cover change project ........... 104
   4.3  Vegetation characteristics ............................ 107
        4.3.1  Using vegetation indices ....................... 108
        4.3.2  Principle components analysis (PCA) ............ 111
        4.3.3  Other MODIS vegetation data products ........... 112
        4.3.4  Using active sensors for vegetation mapping .... 112
   4.4  Summary ............................................... 119

5 Terrain and soils ........................................... 120
   5.1 Elevation .............................................. 120
        5.1.1  What is elevation? ............................. 121
        5.1.2  Representing three-dimensional surfaces ........ 123
        5.1.3  Acquiring elevation data ....................... 126
        5.1.4  DEM preprocessing .............................. 128
        5.1.5  Products derived from DEMs ..................... 130
        5.1.6  Using DEMs to improve mapping accuracy ......... 131
        5.1.7  Three-dimensional analysis and visualization ... 135
   5.2  Geology and soils ..................................... 136
        5.2.1  Geology ........................................ 137
        5.2.2  Soils .......................................... 137
   5.3  Summary ............................................... 138

6  Marine and coastal environments ............................ 140
   6.1  Separating the surface, water column, and bottom ...... 141
        6.1.1  Water types .................................... 143
        6.1.2  Water column correction ........................ 147
        6.1.3  Bathymetry ..................................... 150
        6.1.4  Top-down versus bottom-up approaches ........... 152
   6.2  Water properties ...................................... 154
        6.2.1 Chlorophyll ..................................... 156
        6.2.2  Primary productivity ........................... 157
        6.2.3  Harmful algal blooms ........................... 158
        6.2.4  Sea surface temperature (SST) .................. 160
        6.2.5  Predicting coral bleaching ..................... 161
        6.2.6  Salinity ....................................... 162
        6.2.7  Ocean circulation .............................. 164
   6.3  Shallow benthic environments .......................... 165
        6.3.1 Coral reefs ..................................... 165
        6.3.2 Seagrasses and kelp ............................. 170
   6.4  Summary ............................................... 173

7  Wetlands—estuaries, inland wetlands, and freshwater
   lakes ...................................................... 174
   7.1  Mangroves ............................................. 179
   7.2  Salt and freshwater marshes ........................... 181
        7.2.1  Lidar mapping of wetland elevation ............. 182
        7.2.2  Lidar mapping of wetland vegetation ............ 184
        7.2.3  Spectral characteristics used in mapping of
               marshes ........................................ 185
        7.2.4  Combining lidar and multispectral data ......... 188
        7.2.5  Radar mapping of wetlands ...................... 189
        7.2.6  Using radar to map hurricane-related
               flooding ....................................... 190
   7.3  Shoreline mapping of lakes and rivers ................. 192
   7.4  Water quality mapping and monitoring .................. 192
        7.4.1  Hyperspectral remote sensing of water
               quality ........................................ 192
        7.4.2 Thermal mapping ................................. 193
   7.5  Summary ............................................... 194

8  Atmosphere and climate ..................................... 195
   8.1  Climate and the physical environment .................. 196
   8.2  Clouds ................................................ 200
        8.2.1  Clouds and climate ............................. 201
        8.2.2  How cloud remote sensing works ................. 201
   8.3  Aerosols .............................................. 204
        8.3.1 Aerosols and climate ............................ 205
        8.3.2  Aerosols and biological productivity ........... 209
        8.3.3  How aerosol remote sensing works ............... 209
   8.4  Precipitation ......................................... 210
        8.4.1  The basics of precipitation .................... 211
        8.4.2  Ground-based radar ............................. 211
        8.4.3  How remote sensing of precipitation works ...... 212
        8.4.4  A caveat regarding precipitation products ...... 216
        8.4.5  Global precipitation climatology product ....... 218
        8.4.6  Feedbacks between vegetation and
               precipitation .................................. 219
   8.5  Winds ................................................. 221
        8.5.1  The basics of global winds ..................... 224
        8.5.2  How remote sensing of wind works ............... 226
        8.5.3  Winds and ocean productivity ................... 228
   8.6  Temperature and the radiation budget .................. 230
        8.6.1  Temperature and vegetation ..................... 230
        8.6.2  Temperature and species ........................ 231
        8.6.3  The basics of Earth's radiation budget and
               temperature .................................... 232
        8.6.4  Remote sensing of Earth's radiation budget
               and temperature ................................ 233
        8.6.5  Long-term temperature data sets ................ 237
   8.7  Global climate modeling applications to ecology and
        conservation .......................................... 238
   8.8  Summary and a potential way forward through
        ecological forecasting ................................ 241

9  Disturbances: fires and floods ............................. 242
   9.1  Fires and logging in the humid tropics ................ 242
        9.7.1  Tropical fires and biodiversity ................ 246
        9.7.2  Tropical fires and the atmosphere .............. 246
   9.2  Remote sensing of fire and its aftermath .............. 247
        9.2.1  Pre fire assessment ............................ 247
        9.2.2  Fire detection and monitoring .................. 247
        9.2.3  Postfire assessment ............................ 252
        9.2.4  Some satellite fire products ................... 253
   9.3  Remote sensing of floods .............................. 254
        9.3.1 Passive and active remote sensing of floods ..... 255
   9.4  Other disturbance mechanisms .......................... 258
        9.4.1 Volcanoes ....................................... 258
        9.4.2 Dams ............................................ 260
   9.5  Summary ............................................... 260

Part III Putting remote sensing into practice: conservation
         and ecology applications

10 Landscape fragmentation .................................... 263
   10.1 Fragmentation basics .................................. 264
   10.2 Fragmentation metrics ................................. 267
   10.3 Issues in processing fragmentation data ............... 270
   10.4 Composition metrics ................................... 274
   10.5 Configuration, edge, and connectivity metrics ......... 276
   10.6 Fractal dimensions .................................... 279
   10.7 Connectivity metrics .................................. 280
   10.8 Route network metrics ................................. 281
   10.9 Fragmentation analyses at different scales using
        remote sensing ........................................ 283
   10.10 Summary .............................................. 284

11 Human interfaces and urban change .......................... 285
   11.1 Importance of remotely sensed data for studying
        urban interfaces ...................................... 286
   11.2 Data sources for urban classification ................. 287
   11.3 Data analysis techniques .............................. 289
        11.3.1 Image rectification ............................ 289
        11.3.2 Preprocessing .................................. 292
        11.3.3 Change detection algorithms .................... 293
   11.4 Accuracy measurements for urban change ................ 296
   11.5 Texture analysis ...................................... 298
   11.6 Complex urban land cover analyses ..................... 301
   11.7 Urban heat islands .................................... 305
   11.8 Summary ............................................... 306

12 Protected area design and monitoring ....................... 307
   12.1 Planning for protected areas .......................... 309
        12.1.1 Designing individual protected areas ........... 309
        12.1.2 Designing networks of protected areas .......... 310
   12.2 Managing and monitoring protected areas ............... 314
   12.3 Integrating remotely sensed data and social and
        economic considerations into protected area planning
        and monitoring ........................................ 316
   12.4 Global-scale monitoring and resources for remotely
        sensed data and protected areas ....................... 317
   12.5 Summary and cautions about the use of remotely
        sensed data for protected area design and
        monitoring ............................................ 319

13 Integrating field data ..................................... 321
   13.1 Integrating field data and remotely sensed data ....... 322
        13.1.1 Remote sensing versus field methods ............ 322
        13.1.2 Handheld sensors: an intersection of remote
               sensing and field methods ...................... 323
        13.1.3 Cround-level field photography ................. 325
        13.1.4 Telemetry ...................................... 328
   13.2 Summary ............................................... 332

14 Linking remote sensing with modeling ....................... 333
   14.1 What are models? ...................................... 335
   14.2 How do I start? Steps to developing models ............ 336
        14.2.1 Establish problem statement .................... 336
        14.2.2 Define your model system's boundaries .......... 337
        14.2.3 Define your modeling approach .................. 338
        14.2.4 Identify model variables ....................... 339
        14.2.5 Test and validate your model ................... 342
   14.3 What remote sensing products are commonly used in
        modeling? ............................................. 343
        14.3.1 Climate ........................................ 344
        14.3.2 Terrain and soils .............................. 345
        14.3.3 Land cover ..................................... 346
        14.3.4 Land use ....................................... 347
        14.3.5 Landscape pattern descriptors .................. 347
   14.4 Summary ............................................... 349

15 Global conservation ........................................ 350
   15.1 Remote sensing and the road to a global ecology ....... 350
   15.2 Remote sensing and global conservation ................ 357
        15.2.1 Global priority setting for conservation ....... 358
        15.2.2 Monitoring changes on earth's surface .......... 360
        15.2.3 Ecological forecasting ......................... 361
   15.3 A look ahead .......................................... 361
   15.4 Summary ............................................... 363

Part IV Appendices

Appendix 1 The electromagnetic spectrum ....................... 367

Appendix 2 Image-processing software .......................... 370
   A2.1 Graphics software ..................................... 370
        A2.1.1 Proprietary .................................... 370
        A2.1.2 Open source .................................... 371
   A2.2 Geographic information system (CIS) software .......... 371
        A2.2.1 Proprietary .................................... 371
        A2.2.2 Open source .................................... 371
   A2.3 Specialized remote sensing software ................... 372
        A2.3.1 Proprietary .................................... 372
        A2.3.2 Open source .................................... 373
   A2.4 Numerical analysis software ........................... 373
        A2.4.1 Proprietary .................................... 373
        A2.4.2 Open source .................................... 374

Appendix 3 Open source software ............................... 375
   A3.1 What is open source software? ......................... 375
   A3.2 Where does open source software fit in? ............... 376
   A3.3 So, how can you help? ................................. 376
   A3.4 What is out there and where can I get it? ............. 376

Appendix 4 Satellites and sensors ............................. 377
   A4 1 Optical ............................................... 377
   A4.2 Radar ................................................. 381
   A4.3 Free remotely sensed data archives .................... 382

Appendix 5 Visual interpretation .............................. 384
   A5.1 What do you need to interpret images? ................. 384
   A5.2 Different levels of interpretation .................... 385
   A5.3 The elements of image interpretation .................. 387
        A5.3.1 Color and tone ................................. 387
        A5.3.2 Size and shape ................................. 389
        A5.3.3 Texture and pattern ............................ 389
        A5.3.4 Shadows ........................................ 391
        A5.3.5 Relative and absolute location ................. 392
        AS.3.6 Time ........................................... 393
   A5.4 Practice, practice, practice .......................... 395

Appendix 6 Systems for observing climate and atmospheric
   phenomena .................................................. 396
   A6.1 Clouds ................................................ 396
   A6.2 Aerosols .............................................. 404
   A6.3 Precipitation ......................................... 414
   A6.4 Temperature ........................................... 415

References .................................................... 416
Index ......................................................... 451


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