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Mangrove Extent, Kakadu NP, NT

This data set consists of a shapefile/kml of mangrove extent for Kakadu National Park mangroves generated from RapidEye data. Information on the details of the attribute fields for the 2014_KakaduNP_MangroveExtent_RapidEye. are located in this document in the section titled 'format.attributes'.

 

RapidEye Mangrove Map Kakadu National Park

Abstract or Summary RapidEye visible, red edge and near infrared data (of 6.5 m spatial resolution) were obtained for Kakadu NP through the Planet Lab’s Inc. Ambassador Program. Four scenes from 2014 (22 May, 18 August, 27 September and 7 August), and 2016 (5 December) were calibrated to surface reflectance using the ARCSI software (Bunting et al., 2017) and subsequently combined into a two mosaics, one for each year. The areas of Kakadu NP that supported larger sections of mangroves were then identified with reference to the Mudcrab Survey map of mangroves, which was generated by Danaher et al. (2000). However, many areas between the sections identified in this survey were not detected and hence a mask was manually created to also encompass these. The extent of mangroves within the combined area was then classified using a maximum likelihood (ML) classification algorithm and over 200 training samples taken from known areas of mangroves dominated by different species (primarily Avicennia marina, Rhizophora stylosa and Sonneratia alba) as well as adjoining land covers including rainforest, mudflats and water. Once generated, the map of mangrove extent was refined by overlaying a vector outline of mangroves onto the RapidEye data and manually adding or taking away. Following mapping of mangrove extent for 2014, the equivalent area within the 2016 RapidEye image was extracted and the Normalised Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) was calculated for both images. An NDVI difference image was then generated and a threshold of > 0.15, determined through reference to drone imagery acquired in September 2016, was found to best differentiate mangroves that had experienced dieback from those that had retained their foliage.

Data quality The accuracy of the mapping of mangrove extent in 2016 (which was undertaken following a significant dieback event) was assessed with reference to drone data acquired in September 2016 using a Swampfox X5 fixed wing remotely piloted aircraft (RPA) and subsequently a R44 helicopter (North Australian Helicopters) as well as oblique aerial photographs. Within these images, areas of dead and living mangroves were identified. The overall percentage accuracy of the mangrove map for Kakadu NP was 83.1 %, with this varying for the Wildman River (89.7 %), West Alligator River (77.1 %), East Alligator River (75.0 %) and Field Island (89.7 %). The overall accuracy for the dieback classification (partial and dead classes) was 77.1 %, with greatest confusion associated with partial dieback.

Data Licence and Access Rights

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Rights

Copyright (if appropriate). Rights owned by Name. Rights licensed subject to Licence Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY 4.0).

License

Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License, http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 .

Access

These data can be freely downloaded and used subject to the CC BY licence. Attribution and citation is required as described at http://www.auscover.org.au/citation . We ask that you send us citations and copies of publications arising from work that use these data.

 

Version label

Detail

 

Format

2014_Extent_RapidEye_WA

Mangrove extent from 2014 RapidEye data, Kakadu NP

.shp

2016_Extent_RapidEye-WA

Mangrove extent from 2014 RapidEye data, Kakadu NP

.shp

 

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