Remote Sensing (Aug 2021)

Influence of Spatial Resolution for Vegetation Indices’ Extraction Using Visible Bands from Unmanned Aerial Vehicles’ Orthomosaics Datasets

  • Mirko Saponaro,
  • Athos Agapiou,
  • Diofantos G. Hadjimitsis,
  • Eufemia Tarantino

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/rs13163238
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 16
p. 3238

Abstract

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The consolidation of unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) photogrammetric techniques for campaigns with high and medium observation scales has triggered the development of new application areas. Most of these vehicles are equipped with common visible-band sensors capable of mapping areas of interest at various spatial resolutions. It is often necessary to identify vegetated areas for masking purposes during the postprocessing phase, excluding them for the digital elevation models (DEMs) generation or change detection purposes. However, vegetation can be extracted using sensors capable of capturing the near-infrared part of the spectrum, which cannot be recorded by visible (RGB) cameras. In this study, after reviewing different visible-band vegetation indices in various environments using different UAV technology, the influence of the spatial resolution of orthomosaics generated by photogrammetric processes in the vegetation extraction was examined. The triangular greenness index (TGI) index provided a high level of separability between vegetation and nonvegetation areas for all case studies in any spatial resolution. The efficiency of the indices remained fundamentally linked to the context of the scenario under investigation, and the correlation between spatial resolution and index incisiveness was found to be more complex than might be trivially assumed.

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