A comparison of remotely-sensed and inventory datasets for burned area in Mediterranean Europe

Turco, Marco Herrera, Sixto Tourigny, Etienne Chuvieco, Emilio Provenzale, Antonello

A comparison of remotely-sensed and inventory datasets for burned area in Mediterranean Europe

Turco, Marco 1Herrera, Sixto 2Tourigny, Etienne 1Chuvieco, Emilio 3Provenzale, Antonello4
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作者信息

  • 1. Barcelona Supercomp Ctr, Earth Sci Dept, C Jordi Girona 29, Barcelona 08034, Spain
  • 2. Univ Cantabria, Grp Meteorol, Dept Matemat Aplicada & Ciencias Computac, Avda Castros S-N, E-39005 Santander, Spain
  • 3. Univ Alcala De Henares, Dept Geol Geog & Environm, Environm Remote Sensing Res Grp, Calle Colegios 2, Alcala De Henares 28801, Spain
  • 4. CNR, Inst Geosci & Earth Resources, Via Moruzzi 1, I-56124 Pisa, Italy
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Abstract

Quantitative estimate of observational uncertainty is an essential ingredient to correctly interpret changes in climatic and environmental variables such as wildfires. In this work we compare four state-of-the-art satellite fire products with the gridded, ground-based EFFIS dataset for Mediterranean Europe and analyse their statistical differences. The data are compared for spatial and temporal similarities at different aggregations to identify a spatial scale at which most of the observations provide equivalent results. The results of the analysis indicate that the datasets show high temporal correlation with each other (0.5/0.6) when aggregating the data at resolution of at least 1.0 degrees or at NUTS3 level. However, burned area estimates vary widely between datasets. Filtering out satellite fires located on urban and crop land cover classes greatly improves the agreement with EFFIS data. Finally, in spite of the differences found in the area estimates, the spatial pattern is similar for all the datasets, with spatial correlation increasing as the resolution decreases. Also, the general reasonable agreement between satellite products builds confidence in using these datasets and in particular the most-recent developed dataset, FireCCI51, shows the best agreement with EFFIS overall. As a result, the main conclusion of the study is that users should carefully consider the limitations of the satellite fire estimates currently available, as their uncertainties cannot be neglected in the overall uncertainty estimate/cascade that should accompany global or regional change studies and that removing fires on human-dominated land areas is key to analyze forest fires estimation from satellite products.

Key words

Burned area/Observational uncertainty/Climate analysis/Mediterranean basin/Earth Science Information

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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13
参考文献量43
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