Evaluation and comparison of Landsat 8, Sentinel-2 and Deimos-1 remote sensing indices for assessing burn severity in Mediterranean fire-prone ecosystems

Calvo, Leonor Garcia-Llamas, Paula Suarez-Seoane, Susana Manuel Fernandez-Guisuraga, Jose Fernandez-Garcia, Victor Fernandez-Manso, Alfonso Quintano, Carmen Taboada, Angela Marcos, Elena

Evaluation and comparison of Landsat 8, Sentinel-2 and Deimos-1 remote sensing indices for assessing burn severity in Mediterranean fire-prone ecosystems

Calvo, Leonor 1Garcia-Llamas, Paula 1Suarez-Seoane, Susana 1Manuel Fernandez-Guisuraga, Jose 1Fernandez-Garcia, Victor 1Fernandez-Manso, Alfonso 2Quintano, Carmen 3Taboada, Angela 1Marcos, Elena1
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作者信息

  • 1. Univ Leon, Fac Biol & Environm Sci, Biodivers & Environm Management Dept, Campus Vegasana S-N, E-24071 Leon, Spain
  • 2. Univ Leon, Agrarian Sci & Engn Dept, Av Astorga S-N, Ponferrada 24400, Spain
  • 3. Univ Valladolid, Elect Technol Dept, Valladolid, Spain
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Abstract

The development of improved spatial and spectral resolution sensors provides new opportunities to assess burn severity more accurately. This study evaluates the ability of remote sensing indices derived from three remote sensing sensors (i.e., Landsat 8 OLI/TIRS, Sentinel-2 MSI and Deimos-1 SLIM-6.22) to assess burn severity (site, vegetation and soil burn severity). As a case study, we used a megafire (9,939 ha) that occurred in a Mediterranean ecosystem in northwestern Spain. Remote sensing indices included seven reflective, two thermal and four mixed indices, which were derived from each satellite and were validated with field burn severity metrics obtained from CBI index. Correlation patterns of field burn severity and remote sensing indices were relatively consistent across the different sensors. Additionally, regardless of the sensor, indices that incorporated SWIR bands (i.e., NBR-based indices), exceed those using red and NIR bands, and thermal and mixed indices. High resolution Sentinel-2 imagery only slightly improved the performance of indices based on NBR compared to Landsat 8. The dNDVI index from Landsat 8 and Sentinel-2 images showed relatively similar correlation values to NBR-based indices for site and soil burn severity, but showed limitations using Deimos-1. In general, monotemporal and relativized indices better correlated with vegetation burn severity in heterogeneous systems than differenced indices. This study showed good potential for Landsat 8 OLI/TIRS and Sentinel-2 MSI for burn severity assessment in fire-prone heterogeneous ecosystems, although we highlight the need for further evaluation of Deimos-1 SLIM-6-22 in different fire scenarios, especially using bi-temporal indices.

Key words

Composition burn index/Remote sensing/Thermal indices/Spectral indices

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出版年

2019
International journal of applied earth observation and geoinformation

International journal of applied earth observation and geoinformation

SCI
ISSN:0303-2434
被引量17
参考文献量59
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