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If remote sensing data are only used for landscape monitoring and land-use classification, the experiences of the
methodological tools of satellite data will only partially be exploited. Due to the improved geometric resolution of new
sensors the analysis of settlement areas is faced with new challenges. Depending on higher monitoring scales the
analysis could even then involve the identification of single objects if only whole settlement areas of towns and villages
need to be derived. Because of such extended possibilities, several current research efforts try to develop new strategies
for very heterogeneous and rapidly changing urban and suburban areas from different points of view. With an
increasingly better precision predication about e.g. abiotic and biotic components in landscapes and the sealing degree
in urban agglomerations are possible.
2. REMOTE SENSING DATA AND ITS ROLE FOR URBAN AND REGIONAL MONITORING
The vast political changes in east Germany also caused rapid natural and anthropogenic changes that are hardly being
recognizable by means of conventional investigation methods. Basic pieces of information on potential natural
structures in landscapes and in biotopes can no longer be delivered by spot checks. Information density is low because
of lacking regional mapping. Furthermore, the reduced ability to realize and control environmental changes in time is
another hint showing us the necessity to establish a system observing, controlling, and evaluating the state in which our
environment is in and making its changes recordable, able to be quantified and assessed.
Latest satellite-based remote sensing data (e.g. IRS-1C&D, IKONOS) can make a crucial contribution concerning the
presented problems for drawing up the inventory and beyond that for current observation of regions. Geometrically and
spectrally they are suitable to enter most diverse structures and features of a cultural landscape. Moreover, they offer
two advantages essential for monitoring: for rather small cost expenditures they supply topical and surface covering
information, and the data can be repeatedly gained in short periods. Additionally, aerial photographs (e.g. CIR-
photographs, taken to produce a country-wide biotope mapping) are available in many urban regions, which are from
special use as further sources of information. The use of fuzzy logic classifications and the application of textural
parameters allow special classification methods that enable better exploitation of different data. Furthermore, the
combination of remote sensing data and spatial models allow predictions that can be essential for urban and regional
planning (see chapter 5).
Spatial planning requires information on the state of land use in short time intervals, and in high spatial and spectral
resolution. This demand can only be met by using the latest satellite data that offer an optimum spectral analysis at a
high scale. The Indian satellite IRS-1C&D currently delivers multispectral data on 23 metres and a 5-metre
panchromatic image at the same time. Landsat TM — 7 possesses a 30 metres multispectral image and a 15 metres
panchromatic plus a 60 metres thermal band. Such satellites and sensors offer basic data information for regional
planning and, with their simultaneous records, are a challenge for the analysis of image fused data. Other sensors such
as IKONOS-2, launched in September 1999, or Orbview 3 are capable of collecting both panchromatic images at a
resolution of one meter, and multispectral images with a resolution of four meters. As they image an 11-kilometer-wide
strip or, respectively, an 8-kilometer-wide strip their data will mainly be applied on small test sites at a high scale.
These data will offer diverse possibilities to work on urban structures, linear structures in landscapes, or to develop new
parameters for landscape metrics.
Satellite data and further geo-information data are used for landscape ecological evaluations, e.g. to predict structural
diversity in landscape, to derive quantitative data on open space fragmentation and on interlink of biotope structures.
Satellite images are just as much used to identify compensational areas for planning of building land in conurbations or
to quantify landscape metrics by means of derived IRS-1C parameters in order to calculate neighbourhood relations of
objects.
3. LANDSCAPE STRUCTURE ANALYSIS AS A NEW TOOL FOR NATURE SPACE POTENTIAL
ANALYSIS
After Plachter (1991) and Fiedler et al. (1996) the dimensions of human influence on spatial structures are so
fundamental that land use is entitled to an indicator function for the detection and valuation of a social influence
(Schónfelder 1984). The appearance of a landscape is characterised by its natural equipment including its complex
effects on the one hand and the social demand expressed by intensive land use and multipurpose land demands on the
other hand. Therefore landscape monitoring is understood as a system of observations showing modifications in the
state of landscape under the effect of human concern, and referring to landscape components such as vegetation and soil
cover, land use as well as landscape structure.
International Archives of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing. Vol. XXXIII, Part B7. Amsterdam 2000. 119