The International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences (Dec 2019)

MULTI-TEMPORAL ANALYSIS OF DENSE AND SPARSE FORESTS’ RADAR BACKSCATTER USING SENTINEL-1A COLLECTION IN GOOGLE EARTH ENGINE

  • C. M. Arellano,
  • A. A. Maralit,
  • E. C. Paringit,
  • C. J. Sarmiento,
  • R. A. Faelga,
  • F. A. Tandoc,
  • C. Vidad,
  • R. Lopez,
  • F. J. Pamittan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5194/isprs-archives-XLII-4-W19-23-2019
Journal volume & issue
Vol. XLII-4-W19
pp. 23 – 30

Abstract

Read online

Radar data has been historically expensive and complex to process. However, in this milieu of cloud-computing platforms and open-source datasets, radar data analysis has become convenient and can now be performed for more exploratory researches. This study aims to perform multi-temporal analysis of radar backscatter to characterize dense and sparse forest from Sentinel-1 images. The area of study are reforested sites under the National Greening Program (NGP) of the Philippines. Ground data were collected: (1) in 2019, from a 1.35 ha -site in Brgy. Calula, Ipil, Zamboanga Sibugay, (2) in 2019, from a 1.10 ha- site in Brgy. Cabatuanan, Basay, Negros Oriental, and (3) from PhilLiDAR 2 – Project 3: FRExLS’ 2.4 ha -validated site in Ubay, Bohol. SAR intensity values were derived from Sentinel-1 from Google Earth Engine, which is a cloud-based platform with a repository of satellite images and functionalities for data extraction and processing. The temporal variation in C-band radar backscatter from 2014 to 2018 were analyzed. The results show, for the whole period of analysis, that: in VH polarization, dense forest samples backscatter range from −11 to −18 dB in VH and −2 to -13 dB in VV; sparse forest samples range from −12 to -21 dB in VH and −7 to −14 dB in VV; ground samples range from −12 to −24 dB in VH and −6 to −15 dB in VV; and water samples range from −21 to −30 dB in VH and −11 to −26 dB in VV. Forest backscatter are expected to saturate over time, especially in dense forests. These variations are due to differences in forest species, landscape, environmental and climatic drivers, and phenomenon or interventions on the site.