bul 2004
TOWARDS AN UNDERSTANDING OF UNCERTAINTY
IN GREENHOUSE FOREST ASSESSMENTS
S. D. Jones™ *, G. Richards ®, K. Lowell ¢, P. Woodgate 9, L. Buxton ®
* School of Mathematical and Geospatial Sciences, RMIT University,
GPO Box 2476V, Melbourne 3001, VIC Australia simon.jones@rmit.edu.au
? National Carbon Accounting System, Australian Greenhouse Office,
Canberra, A.C.T. Australia gary.richards@greenhouse.gov.au
“ Centre de recherche en géomatique, Université Laval,
Pav. Casault Ste-Foy, Québec G1K 7P4 Canada Kim.Lowell@scg.ulaval.ca
3 Cooperative Research Centre for Spatial Information,
University of Melbourne, VIC 3010 Australia peterww@unimelb.edu.au
Commission TS WG VIU/6 Monitoring and Modelling Global Change
KEY WORDS: Remote Sensing, Vegetation, Land Cover, Analysis, Monitoring, Global-Environmental-Databases
ABSTRACT:
Australia's National Carbon Accounting System provides information on land-based sources and sinks of greenhouse gases to fulfil
international reporting obligations under the Kyoto Protocol, as well as providing annual estimates to Australia's National
Greenhouse Gas Inventory. Manifold is an understanding of change in forest area: afforestation, reforestation and deforestation
events. Using a thirty-year archive of Landsat imagery (1972-2002), a set of 12 continent-wide land cover maps, and associated
change layers for the 11 intervals was created. A continuous probability network was then used to estimate the probability of a pixel
belonging to Forest or Non-Forest classes for each of these 12 dates. These Forest/Non-forest classifications, from successive dates,
were then compared on a pixel-by-pixel basis to identify areas of No Change (Forest), No Change (Non-forest), Deforestation, and
Regrowth. To gain an understanding of the uncertainty in these change maps, and so that improvements could be made in the
mapping technique, a fuzzy evaluation methodology was developed and implemented. A network of ~300 aerial photographs was
co-registered to the database and more than ~12,000 points were compared using photo interpretation to validate the matching pixels
on each respective change map. The classes used for the photographic interpretation were Definitely Forest, Probably Forest,
Unsure, Probably Non-forest, and Definitely Non-forest. Australia-wide the error rates were very low. The ‘definite’ errors for
forest were ~2% and ‘definite’ errors for non-forest ~4%. Hotspots of uncertainty in forest change errors did emerge however in
some forested areas (up to 5.7%). To improve the temporal classification process, a performance analysis was undertaken that cross-
referenced reported change in forest area with reported errors in classification. This process will be repeated with each continent-
wide land cover map update to provide progressive improvement in the change maps.
1. INTRODUCTION
Fundamental to accounting for carbon change in land use is an
understanding of the change in land cover. The impact of an
event associated with land cover change may continue over
many years and vary with time since the event took place. It is,
therefore, necessary to monitor change in land cover over
extended periods of time. To be considered in the NCAS
accounting framework, the land cover change must also be
shown to be directly human-induced, that is a deliberate, not an
indirect natural event (Furby, 2002).
1.1 Background
Article 4.1(1) of the United Nations Framework Convention on
Climate Change (UNFCCC) commits Australia to produce an
annual inventory of national greenhouse gas emissions
according to the Revised 1996 Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change (IPCC) Guidelines for National Greenhouse
Gas Inventories’. The inventory reports human-induced
greenhouse gas emissions, by sources and removals by sinks,
not controlled by the Montreal Protocol, in six sectors: energy,
industrial processes, solvent and other produot use, agriculture, 1.2 Continental Database
land use change and forestry. Reducing the levels of
uncertainty previously associated with estimates of land use
change emissions is essential as they are a significant
component of Australia’s greenhouse gas emissions profile. In
1998, to achieve the above, the Australian Government
commenced the development of its National Carbon
Accounting System (NCAS).
* Corresponding author.
Landsat data were used to create a continent-wide (Australia
including Tasmania) database of Forest / Non-Forest Landcover
for 12 time periods, spanning 1972 to 2002 (1972, 1978, 1980,
1985, 1988, 1989, 1991, 1992, 1995, 1998, 2000 and 2002).
Forests are defined as having a minimum of 20% tree crown
cover and a minimum height of 2 metres at maturity. A
United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, Article 4, para. 3.
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