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Technical Commission VII (B7)

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Bibliographic data

fullscreen: Technical Commission VII (B7)

Multivolume work

Persistent identifier:
1663813779
Title:
XXII ISPRS Congress 2012
Sub title:
Melbourne, Australia, 25 August-1 September 2012
Year of publication:
2013
Place of publication:
Red Hook, NY
Publisher of the original:
Curran Associates, Inc.
Identifier (digital):
1663813779
Language:
English
Additional Notes:
Kongress-Thema: Imaging a sustainable future
Corporations:
International Society for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing, Congress, 22., 2012, Melbourne
International Society for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing
Adapter:
International Society for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing, Congress, 22., 2012, Melbourne
International Society for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing
Founder of work:
International Society for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing, Congress, 22., 2012, Melbourne
International Society for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing
Other corporate:
International Society for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing, Congress, 22., 2012, Melbourne
International Society for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing
Document type:
Multivolume work

Volume

Persistent identifier:
1663821976
Title:
Technical Commission VII
Scope:
546 Seiten
Year of publication:
2013
Place of publication:
Red Hook, NY
Publisher of the original:
Curran Associates, Inc.
Identifier (digital):
1663821976
Illustration:
Illustrationen, Diagramme
Signature of the source:
ZS 312(39,B7)
Language:
English
Additional Notes:
Erscheinungsdatum des Originals ist ermittelt.
Literaturangaben
Usage licence:
Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
Corporations:
International Society for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing, Congress, 22., 2012, Melbourne
International Society for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing
Adapter:
International Society for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing, Congress, 22., 2012, Melbourne
International Society for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing
Founder of work:
International Society for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing, Congress, 22., 2012, Melbourne
International Society for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing
Other corporate:
International Society for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing, Congress, 22., 2012, Melbourne
International Society for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing
Publisher of the digital copy:
Technische Informationsbibliothek Hannover
Place of publication of the digital copy:
Hannover
Year of publication of the original:
2019
Document type:
Volume
Collection:
Earth sciences

Chapter

Title:
[VII/3: INFORMATION EXTRACTION FROM HYPERSPECTRAL DATA]
Document type:
Multivolume work
Structure type:
Chapter

Chapter

Title:
MAPPING THE WETLAND VEGETATION COMMUNITIES OF THE AUSTRALIAN GREAT ARTESIAN BASIN SPRINGS USING SAM, MTMF AND SPECTRALLY SEGMENTED PCA HYPERSPECTRAL ANALYSES D. C. White, M. M. Lewis
Document type:
Multivolume work
Structure type:
Chapter

Contents

Table of contents

  • XXII ISPRS Congress 2012
  • Technical Commission VII (B7)
  • Cover
  • Title page
  • TABLE OF CONTENTS
  • International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences Volume XXXIX, Part B7, Commission VII - elSSN 2194-9034
  • [VII/1: PHYSICAL MODELLING AND SIGNATURES IN REMOTE SENSING]
  • [VII/2: SAR INTERFEROMETRY]
  • [VII/3: INFORMATION EXTRACTION FROM HYPERSPECTRAL DATA]
  • CLASSIFICATION OF ROOF MATERIALS USING HYPERSPECTRAL DATA C. Chisense
  • SPECTRAL ANALYSIS OF DIFFERENT VEGETATION COVER USING THE HYPERION SENSOR - A CASE STUDY IN THE STATE OF RIO DE JANEIRO - BRAZIL E. M. F. R. de Souza, R. S. Vicens, A. E. P. Rosa, C. B. M. Cruz
  • Robust Metric based Anomaly Detection in Kernel Feature Space Bo Du, Liangpei Zhang, Huang Xin
  • COMPARISOM OF WAVELET-BASED AND HHT-BASED FEATURE EXTRACTION METHODS FOR HYPERSPECTRAL IMAGE CLASSIFICATION X.-M. Huang and P.-H. Hsu
  • ANALYSIS OF CONCRETE REFLECTANCE CHARACTERISTICS USING SPECTROMETER AND VNIR HYPERSPECTRAL CAMERA Jin-Duk Lee, Bon A. Dewitt, Sung-Soon Lee, Kon-Joon Bhang, Jung-Bo Sim
  • EXTRACTING TEMPORAL AND SPATIAL DISTRIBUTIONS INFORMATION ABOUT ALGAL GLOOMS BASED ON MULTITEMPORAL MODIS Lü Chunguang, Tian Qingjiu
  • HYPERSPECTRAL DATA CLASSIFICATION USING FACTOR GRAPHS Aliaksei Makarau, Rupert Müller, Gintautas Palubinskas, and Peter Reinartz
  • ROAD CLASSIFICATION AND CONDITION DETERMINATION USING HYPERSPECTRAL IMAGERY M. Mohammadi
  • ASSESSING THE SIGNIFICANCE OF HYPERION SPECTRAL BANDS IN FOREST CLASSIFICATION G. J. Newnham, D. Lazaridis, N. C. Sims, A. P. Robinson, D. S. Culvenor
  • ANOMALY DETECTION AND COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF HYDROTHERMAL ALTERATION MATERIALS TROUGH HYPERSPECTRAL MULTISENSOR DATA IN THE TURRIALBA VOLCANO J. G. Rejas, J. Martinez-Frias, J. Bonatti, R. Martinez and M. Marchamalo
  • STUDY ON OIL-GAS RESERVOIR DETECTING METHODS USING HYPERSPECTRAL REMOTE SENSING Qingjiu Tian
  • MAPPING THE WETLAND VEGETATION COMMUNITIES OF THE AUSTRALIAN GREAT ARTESIAN BASIN SPRINGS USING SAM, MTMF AND SPECTRALLY SEGMENTED PCA HYPERSPECTRAL ANALYSES D. C. White, M. M. Lewis
  • [VII/4: METHODS FOR LAND COVER CLASSIFICATION]
  • [VII/5: METHODS FOR CHANGE DETECTION AND PROCESS MODELLING]
  • [VII/6: REMOTE SENSING DATA FUSION]
  • [VII/7: THEORY AND EXPERIMENTS IN RADAR AND LIDAR]
  • [VII/3, VII/6, III/2, V/3: INTEGRATION OF HYPERSPECTRAL AND LIDAR DATA]
  • [VII/7, III/2, V/1, V/3, ICWG V/I: LOW-COST UAVS (UVSS) AND MOBILE MAPPING SYSTEMS]
  • [VII/7, III/2, V/3: WAVEFORM LIDAR FOR REMOTE SENSING]
  • [ADDITIONAL PAPERS]
  • AUTHOR INDEX
  • Cover

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International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences, Volume XXXIX-B7, 2012 
XXII ISPRS Congress, 25 August — 01 September 2012, Melbourne, Australia 
MAPPING THE WETLAND VEGETATION COMMUNITIES OF THE AUSTRALIAN 
GREAT ARTESIAN BASIN SPRINGS USING SAM, MTMF AND SPECTRALLY 
SEGMENTED PCA HYPERSPECTRAL ANALYSES 
D. C. White *, M. M. Lewis 
CORRESPONDING AUTHOR: *Davina C. White, Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Landscape Futures Program, The 
Environment Institute, The University of Adelaide, South Australia, E-mail: davina.white@adelaide.edu.au, Tel: +61 
(0)8 8303 8112, Fax.: +61 (0)8 8303 6717. 
TECHNICAL SESSION: Technical Commission VII, WG VII/3 
KEY WORDS: Hyperspectral, Environment, Ecosystem, Analysis, Vegetation; Monitoring; Spectral 
ABSTRACT: 
The Australian Great Artesian Basin (GAB) supports a unique and diverse range of groundwater dependent wetland ecosystems 
termed GAB springs. In recent decades the ecological sustainability of the springs has become uncertain as demands on this iconic 
groundwater resource increase. The impacts of existing water extractions for mining and pastoral activities are unknown. This 
situation is compounded by the likelihood of future increasing demand for extractions. 
Hyperspectral remote sensing provides the necessary spectral and spatial detail to discriminate wetland vegetation communities. 
Therefore the objectives of this paper are to discriminate the spatial extent and distribution of key spring wetland vegetation 
communities associated with the GAB springs evaluating three hyperspectral techniques: Spectral Angle Mapper (SAM), Mixture 
Tuned Matched Filtering (MTMF) and Spectrally Segmented PCA. In addition, to determine if the hyperspectral techniques 
developed can be applied at a number of sites representative of the range of spring formations and geomorphic settings and at two 
temporal intervals. 
Two epochs of HyMap airborne hyperspectral imagery were captured for this research in March 2009 and April 2011 at a number of 
sites representative of the floristic and geomorphic diversity of GAB spring groups/complexes within South Australia. Colour digital 
aerial photography at 30 cm GSD was acquired concurrently with the HyMap imagery. The image acquisition coincided with a field 
campaign of spectroradiometry measurements and a botanical survey. 
To identify key wavebands which have the greatest capability to discriminate vegetation communities of the GAB springs and 
surrounding area three hyperspectral data reduction techniques were employed: (1) Spectrally Segmented PCA (SSPCA); (ii) the 
Minimum Noise Transform (MNF); and (iii) the Pixel Purity Index (PPI). SSPCA was applied to NDVI-masked vegetation portions 
of the HyMap imagery with wavelength regions spectrally segmented for the VIS-NIR (450-1,350 nm), SWIR 1 (1,400-1,800 nm) 
and SWIR 2 (1,950-2,480 nm). The resulting pure endmember image pixels of the vegetation communities identified were used as 
target spectra for input into the SAM and MTMF algorithms. 
Spring wetland vegetation communities successfully discriminated include low lying reeds and sedges along spring tails (Baumea 
spp. and Cyperus spp.), dense homogenous stands of Phragmites australis reeds, and sporadic patches of salt couch grass 
(Sparabolus spp.). 
Our results indicate that a combination of hyperspectral remote sensing techniques which reduce superfluous wavebands providing a 
targeted spectral matching approach are capable of discriminating and mapping key vegetation communities of the GAB springs. 
This approach provides reliable baseline mapping of the GAB spring wetland vegetation communities, with repeatability over space 
and time. In addition it has the capability to determine the sensitivity of spring wetland vegetation extent, distribution and diversity, 
to associated changes in spring flow rates due to water extractions. This approach will ultimately inform water allocation plan 
management policies. 
1. INTRODUCTION 2003; Gotch et. al., 2008; Ponder, 2004). The GAB springs are 
of great national and international importance for their 
1.1 Background ecological, scientific and economic values, and are culturally 
Th | f : significant to indigenous Australians (Ah Chee, 2002). They 
e Australian Great Artesian Basin (GAB) supports a unique have historically provided a vital source of water in the inland 
and diverse range of groundwater dependent wetland heart of Australia (Badman et. al., 1996; Boyd, 1990; Mudd, 
ecosystems termed GAB springs, which contain a number of ^ 2000), In recent decades the ecological sustainability of the 
rare and relic endemic flora and fauna (Fensham and Fairfax, 
  
* Corresponding author.
	        

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