Remote Sensing (Apr 2021)

National Mapping of New Zealand Pasture Productivity Using Temporal Sentinel-2 Data

  • Alexander C. Amies,
  • John R. Dymond,
  • James D. Shepherd,
  • David Pairman,
  • Coby Hoogendoorn,
  • Marmar Sabetizade,
  • Stella E. Belliss

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/rs13081481
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 8
p. 1481

Abstract

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A national map of pasture productivity, in terms of mass of dry matter yield per unit area and time, enables evaluation of regional and local land-use suitability. Difficulty in measuring this quantity at scale directed this research, which utilises four years of Sentinel-2 satellite imagery and collected pasture yield measurements to develop a model of pasture productivity. The model uses a Normalised Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI), with spatio-temporal segmentation and averaging, to estimate mean annual pasture productivity across all of New Zealand’s grasslands with a standard error of prediction of 2.2 t/ha/y. Regional aggregates of pasture yield demonstrate expected spatial variations. The pasture productivity map may be used to classify grasslands objectively into stratified levels of production on a national scale. Due to its ability to highlight areas of land use intensification suitability, the national map of pasture productivity is of value to landowners, land users, and environmental scientists.

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