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International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences, Vol XXXV, Part B-YF. Istanbul 2004
Table 2. Description of ve
e
getation type and their appearance on a Landsat image (4 red, 5 — green and 3 > blue)
Vegetation type
Vegetation characteristic
Interpretation remark
Primary
(tropical wet
evergreen and
semi-evergreen)
forests
Multi-storeyed forests with a number of
matured trees in the upper canopy; shrubs and
sometimes bamboo in lower canopy
In some areas a gregarious occurrence of
Dipterocarpus species is noticed
Dark brown with sometimes reddish
brown spots
Rough texture
Irregular boundary
Secondary
(young) forests
Mixture of a number of species at pole-stage
Cleared several years ago and left undisturbed
Red to reddish brown
Smoother texture than the mature
forests
Mixed Dominated by bamboo (Muli: Melocanna Yellow and yellowish brown
vegetation baccifera, Mitinga: Bambusa tulda) with sometimes Texture varies with region
dominated by scattered trees in the upper canopy Difficult to distinguish from natural
bamboo Assoication varies with local topography, top forests when bamboo is intermixed
and mid slope covered by small-sized bamboo
(Muli) whereas foothill and valleys by larger
bamboos (Mitinga)
Shrubs Shrubs intermixed with seedling and sapling of Light yellow with green, smooth
natural vegetation, bamboo and grasses texture
Formerly covered by natural forests, repeated If canopy is closed appears light
disturbance resulted scrubby or bush type vegetation yellow but in case of exposed soil it
appears green
Located nearby the habitation
Acacia Plantation with Acacia auriculformis and A. Dark red with smooth texture, dark
plantation
mangium
Excellent growth was noticed
tone is sometimes identical
Identification between two species is
not possible without ground information
Usually follows a regular boundary
Mixed A variety of indigenous species: Dipterocarpus Reddish brown, smooth texture,
plantation with turbinatus, Sysygium grande, Artorcarpus regular boundary
indigenous Chaplasha, Gmelina arborea, Chikrassia tabularis
species etc.
Green with dark brown spots. Those
spots might appear due to scattered
remaining of natural vegetation inside this
Scattered trees, |e
teak plantation,
teak coppice
This class has a large variability, all the e
mentioned class appears as the same spectral
response on a Landsat image
° Teak coppice appears if teak plantations were class
removed e
° Scattered trees appear due to the extreme
human interference on natural forests
Teak trees have large leaves with no
undergrowth, scattered trees with scrubby
surrounding appears as same.
° No difference can be made with teak
plantation or coppice
Rubber e Introduced before one-two decades for the ° Green on Landsat image. This tone
plantation production of rubber appears from bare soil because trees were
e The spacing is variable leafless during the time of image
» Rubber tree sheds leaves during winter. acquisition
CY. Beginning of January the leaves turn to pale; by the
of | end of the month trees are complete leafless
ps
ed
ely reflectance due to the internal leaf structure varies with age, and 4. CONCLUSION
rot young vegetation has a higher reflectance than the mature one
in this spectral region though shadow might have an additional The study generated an interpretation key and a spectral library,
influence on it. which can be used for interpretation and monitoring forest in
ver | the tropics. However, there are several limitations of this study.
in | For example, variation in crown characteristics within a specific
of | 3.4 Selective Interpretation Key species can be a source of interpretation error leading to
of | misclassification. Among the factors that can cause significant
m | The above result can be summarized and presented in table 2 for ^ variation are tree age and stress. Trees growing on deep, fertile
Icy interpretation purpose. To ease the interpretation, Landsat soils at low elevations tend to have different crown forms than
) p- image and its corresponding field photos have also been their counterparts on shallow, rocky soils at high elevations.
he included (Figure 4 and figure 5). Position of a tree crown on a satellite image can also change its
ral appearance. Trees on shaded slopes will appear darker and have
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