Remote Sensing (Feb 2020)
Object-Based Mapping of Gullies Using Optical Images: A Case Study in the Black Soil Region, Northeast of China
Abstract
Gully erosion is a widespread natural hazard. Gully mapping is critical to erosion monitoring and the control of degraded areas. The analysis of high-resolution remote sensing images (HRI) and terrain data mixed with developed object-based methods and field verification has been certified as a good solution for automatic gully mapping. Considering the availability of data, we used only open-source optical images (Google Earth images) to identify gully erosion through image feature modeling based on OBIA (Object-Based Image Analysis) in this paper. A two-end extrusion method using the optimal machine learning algorithm (Light Gradient Boosting Machine (LightGBM)) and eCognition software was applied for the automatic extraction of gullies at a regional scale in the black soil region of Northeast China. Due to the characteristics of optical images and the design of the method, unmanaged gullies and gullies harnessed in non-forest areas were the objects of extraction. Moderate success was achieved in the absence of terrain data. According to independent validation, the true overestimation ranged from 20% to 30% and was mainly caused by land use types with high erosion risks, such as bare land and farm lanes being falsely classified as gullies. An underestimation of less than 40% was adjacent to the correctly extracted gullied areas. The results of extraction in regions with geographical object categories of a low complexity were usually more satisfactory. The overall performance demonstrates that the present method is feasible for gully mapping at a regional scale, with high automation, low cost, and acceptable accuracy.
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