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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Automated cropland mapping of continental Africa using Google Earth Engine cloud computing

TLDR
In this article, an automated cropland mapping algorithm (ACMA) was used to capture extensive knowledge on the croplands of Africa available through ground-based training samples, very high (sub-meter to five-meter) resolution imagery (VHRI), and local knowledge captured during field visits and/or sourced from country reports and literature.
Abstract
The automation of agricultural mapping using satellite-derived remotely sensed data remains a challenge in Africa because of the heterogeneous and fragmental landscape, complex crop cycles, and limited access to local knowledge. Currently, consistent, continent-wide routine cropland mapping of Africa does not exist, with most studies focused either on certain portions of the continent or at most a one-time effort at mapping the continent at coarse resolution remote sensing. In this research, we addressed these limitations by applying an automated cropland mapping algorithm (ACMA) that captures extensive knowledge on the croplands of Africa available through: (a) ground-based training samples, (b) very high (sub-meter to five-meter) resolution imagery (VHRI), and (c) local knowledge captured during field visits and/or sourced from country reports and literature. The study used 16-day time-series of Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) composited data at 250-m resolution for the entire African continent. Based on these data, the study first produced accurate reference cropland layers or RCLs (cropland extent/areas, irrigation versus rainfed, cropping intensities, crop dominance, and croplands versus cropland fallows) for the year 2014 that provided an overall accuracy of around 90% for crop extent in different agro-ecological zones (AEZs). The RCLs for the year 2014 (RCL2014) were then used in the development of the ACMA algorithm to create ACMA-derived cropland layers for 2014 (ACL2014). ACL2014 when compared pixel-by-pixel with the RCL2014 had an overall similarity greater than 95%. Based on the ACL2014, the African continent had 296 Mha of net cropland areas (260 Mha cultivated plus 36 Mha fallows) and 330 Mha of gross cropland areas. Of the 260 Mha of net cropland areas cultivated during 2014, 90.6% (236 Mha) was rainfed and just 9.4% (24 Mha) was irrigated. Africa has about 15% of the world’s population, but only about 6% of world’s irrigation. Net cropland area distribution was 95 Mha during season 1, 117 Mha during season 2, and 84 Mha continuous. About 58% of the rainfed and 39% of the irrigated were single crops (net cropland area without cropland fallows) cropped during either season 1 (January-May) or season 2 (June-September). The ACMA algorithm was deployed on Google Earth Engine (GEE) cloud computing platform and applied on MODIS time-series data from 2003 through 2014 to obtain ACMA-derived cropland layers for these years (ACL2003 to ACL2014). The results indicated that over these twelve years, on average: (a) croplands increased by 1 Mha/yr, and (b) cropland fallows decreased by 1 Mha/year. Cropland areas computed from ACL2014 for the 55 African countries were largely underestimated when compared with an independent source of census-based cropland data, with a root-mean-square error (RMSE) of 3.5 Mha. ACMA demonstrated the ability to hind-cast (past years), now-cast (present year), and forecast (future years) cropland products using MODIS 250-m time-series data rapidly, but currently, insufficient reference data exist to rigorously report trends from these results.

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Citations
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Deep learning-based crop mapping in the cloudy season using one-shot hyperspectral satellite imagery

TL;DR: This paper focuses on deep learning based crop mapping using one-shot hyperspectral satellite imagery, where three convolutional neural network (CNN) models, i.e., 1D-CNN, 2D -CNN, and 3D- CNN models, are applied for end-to-end crop mapping.
Journal ArticleDOI

Land Use Change and Climate Variation in the Three Gorges Reservoir Catchment from 2000 to 2015 Based on the Google Earth Engine.

TL;DR: There was a significantly negative relationship between LST and SINDVI in most parts of the TGRC, especially in expanding urban areas and growing forest areas, which highlighted the importance of environmental protection, particularly proper management of land use, for sustainable development in the catchment.
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Nationwide Flood Monitoring for Disaster Risk Reduction Using Multiple Satellite Data

TL;DR: The MODIS-derived synchronized floodwater index (SfWi) was used to detect the maximum extent of a nationwide flood based on annual time-series data of 2015 in order to maximize the application of optical satellite data.
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Review of Geospatial Technology for Infectious Disease Surveillance: Use Case on COVID-19

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Journal ArticleDOI

Large area cropland extent mapping with Landsat data and a generalized classifier.

TL;DR: A generalized image classifier to map cropland extent is reported on, which builds a classification model using training data from one location and time period, applied to other times and locations without the need for additional training data, suggesting the generalization/signature extension framework has a great potential for rapid identification and mapping of croplands with reasonable accuracies over large areas.
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