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Article

Field Testing Satellite-Derived Vegetation Health Indices for a Koala Habitat Managers Toolkit

1
School of Education and the Arts, Central Queensland University, Rockhampton 4701, Australia
2
Koala Research-Central Queensland and Flora, Fauna and Freshwater Research, School of Health, Medical and Applied Sciences, Central Queensland University, Rockhampton 4701, Australia
3
School of Health, Medical and Applied Sciences, Central Queensland University, Rockhampton 4701, Australia
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Remote Sens. 2022, 14(9), 2119; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs14092119
Submission received: 4 March 2022 / Revised: 11 April 2022 / Accepted: 25 April 2022 / Published: 28 April 2022

Abstract

:
A Central Queensland University (CQU) partnership with the Queensland Government National Park management agency has developed a koala (Phascolarctos cinereus) habitat managers’ toolkit for vegetation health assessment. Private and public landholders use the field-based toolkit to assess habitat suitability or monitor conservation outcomes for the koala—an iconic Australian arboreal herbivorous marsupial. The toolkit was upgraded recently with instructions to process European Space Agency (ESA) Sentinel-2 multispectral satellite-derived selected vegetation maps for areal vegetation health trend monitoring. A field campaign sought to validate the relatively coarse spatial resolution derived indices (photosynthetic health, leaf area index and leaf water content) to verify their suitability for the habitat management decision-support toolkit. Other user requirement-driven criteria for including remote sensing in the toolkit were imagery and associated processing software costs and ease of map production for habitat managers without cost-effective access to spatial science skills. Despite moderate-to-low field and image vegetation proxy correlations, discussing the results with stakeholders indicates that, at a landscape scale, the use of cost-free, suitable temporal resolution, 10-m spatial resolution imagery is satisfactory when aligned with the design outcomes of a habitat health toolkit.

Graphical Abstract

1. Introduction

According to the Koala Expert Panel instituted by the Queensland (QLD) Government in 2017 [1], the iconic Australian koala (Phascolarctos cinereus) is increasingly threatened in Queensland due to the loss of habitat, climate change, and other pressures. The habitat that remains as the Anthropocene advances needs to be carefully managed by both public and private land managers. Ecologists are increasingly concerned that koala habitats need to be assessed for species refugia from the increasing prevalence of bushfires and other climate change-related environmental risks [2].
Long-term koala conservation is founded on the persistence of a habitat of appropriate composition, structure, and quality. However, the Eucalyptus communities upon which koalas depend change over time in response to environmental, successional, and anthropogenic influences, often working together as a set of complex interacting pressures. The effective conservation management of this species requires an understanding that habitat pressures are acting at a landscape or regional scale over most of the koala’s range. Consequently, habitat condition assessments can be logistically difficult and expensive.
The QLD Government, Department of Environment and Science (DES) funded an applied research project to comprehensively revise a koala habitat toolbox for koala habitat management stakeholders. The resultant document [3] was developed by adapting, with permission, an earlier guide [4] which was prepared with the support of the Ecological Assessment Unit of the Queensland Parks and Wildlife Service (QPWS). A new section has been added to the toolbox—a step-by-step guide to process satellite images to derive a sequence of maps representing vegetation health proxies [5] for koala habitat management decisions. The image processing concepts and map derivation processes selected for the toolbox are utilised for natural resource and agricultural vegetation health trend applications. Based on stakeholder demand, the toolbox needed image processing techniques based on well-established methods for rapid landscape-level habitat health checks, without requiring spatial science specialist training or equipment, and at low cost.
The paper describes the selection process of remotely sensed vegetation health trend proxies, satellite instruments and image processing software. The methods and data used to compare two candidate satellite instruments follow. The results section documents the regression analysis of fieldwork-measured and image-derived parameters. Finally, some discussion on the topic and a conclusion are offered.
The three objectives of the applied image validation project are briefly noted here and further described in the following paragraphs:
  • To identify the most appropriate remote sensing tools for the landscape-scale assessment of koala habitat conditions and changes.
  • To develop a rapid koala habitat health check to enable a qualitative assessment of local habitat condition as a trigger for the quantitative evaluation and potential management intervention; and
  • To compile a suitable koala habitat management toolbox.

1.1. Objective 1—Investigate Remotely Sensed Habitat Condition Indices

A literature review examined existing and emerging satellite remotely sensed vegetation indices that underpin a rapid assessment of trends in landscape-scale vegetation health. The user requirements for this stage indicated that the satellites imagery component was to be, where possible, free of charge for both satellite imagery and the software to process that imagery. Furthermore, the processes needed to be designed so that spatial science training for a habitat manager was not required.
The applied research outputs for this objective were documented satellite image and spatial analysis processes for: (1) koala habitat dynamics observation to support environmental management decisions; (2) field-tested image accuracy assessment, and (3) maps of vegetation health trends suitable for comparing koala habitat vegetation structure under different El-Nino Southern Oscillation (ENSO) states—thus a potential pointer to koala habitat future under changing climate conditions.

1.2. Objective 2—Koala Habitat Health Check

This component of the project focused on developing a stakeholder-friendly rapid assessment tool for monitoring koala habitat health. The approach was to modify the (then) Department of National Parks, Sport and Racing Health Checks for Key Natural Values [6]. The guided methodology has been rolled out across the conservation estate of several stakeholders. The health check framework was modified to reflect the range of koala habitats in Queensland, focusing on Southeast (SEQ) and Central Queensland (CQ) habitat types in remnant and non-remnant landscapes.
The research output was a field guide detailing a range of koala habitat health checks incorporating key koala habitat values applicable to non-remnant and remnant landscapes. The research outcomes will have the capacity for private and public land managers and stakeholders to: (1) undertake a rapid assessment of koala habitat and track habitat health; and (2) provide a trigger for more detailed investigation ahead of management intervention.

1.3. Objective 3—Habitat Management Toolbox

This project component sought expert input to validate a suite of recommended intervention methods for achieving or retrieving key koala habitat values within the koala habitat health check field guide. The review accounted for existing silvicultural and natural resource management options. The toolbox review intended to ensure that it could be applied to remnant lands, non-remnant lands and production forests—both private and in conservation tenure, relying on visual signs of habitat condition. Thus, the initial koala habitat health checks were ‘road-tested’ by a range of professional and community stakeholders to refine the methods.
The research outcome was a validated field guide summarising management techniques appropriate to different land classes, tailored to manage key habitat issues. The future research outputs will be an improved management of koala habitat and an improved quality of habitat.

1.4. Image Acquisition and Processing Considerations

It has long been known that satellite remote sensing provides a cost-effective assessment of vegetation health by utilising the radiometric characteristics of both passive and active instruments over a large area [7]. Xie et al. [8] noted that ‘the technology of remote sensing offered a practical and economical means to study vegetation cover change, especially over a large area’. In the past decade, commercial and government space agencies have launched medium, high, and very high-resolution optical imagery instruments onboard earth monitoring satellites. These instruments include designed characteristics suited to monitoring biota phenological conditions. Some of these instruments are capable of ultra-high (around 1-metre) spatial resolution—a tree crown delineation scale. These capabilities provide a rich source of spatial data for koala habitat assessment. User experience suggests that the critical success factor to stakeholder take-up of satellite remote sensing is well-designed image processing recipes, so that stakeholders can utilise the measurement capability on offer.
The research aimed to keep the cost of deriving vegetation health maps as low as possible, by selecting relatively simple processing steps while retaining the goal of accurate information provision for koala habitat managers. There are many vegetation health proxies in the remote sensing literature—not all of them meet these requirements.
The satellite instrument selection necessarily traded off spatial resolution (pixel size), temporal resolution (revisit cycle) and spectral resolution with image acquisition costs. The selection considered the instrument design specification of reflectance measurement bands suitable for constructing the chosen vegetation health indices. The choice of a practical imager considered image acquisition logistics and vegetation index mapping complexity. The considered satellite instrument design characteristics are listed in Appendix A.
The project team reviewed a selection of image processing software that were: (1) capable of producing the maps required; (2) relatively easy to use by habitat managers without requiring spatial science skills; and (3) preferably free of cost.
In terms of satellite image data retrieval, this paper uses the term ‘reflectance’. Reflectance is the ratio of the solar radiation incident at the earth’s surface (irradiance) and that light reflected by the earth’s surface (radiance) or items on that surface [9]. Reflectance values vary based on: (1) the characteristics of the land cover—colour, roughness, aspect, and other characteristics; (2) the angle of the sun, the angle of the instrument, time of day; and (3) atmospheric interference. The term ‘top-of-atmosphere reflectance’ (or at-sensor reflectance) refers to the amount of light energy measured at the satellite sensor. The term ‘bottom-of-atmosphere’ reflectance (or at-ground reflectance) refers to the measurement of light energy on the ground—which means reflectance correction for light extinction by molecular or particulate reflection or absorption through the atmosphere (hence the term ‘atmospheric correction’).
To meet stakeholder requirements, we ensured that image providers have made essential image corrections [9]. These are radiometric corrections (for instrument error), geometric corrections (to ensure the image maps to the actual terrain) and atmospheric corrections.

2. Materials and Methods

2.1. Biophysical Parameters Selection

The remote sensing science literature describes a wide range of vegetation health indices derived from the mathematical manipulation of reflectance measurements from specified electromagnetic radiation spectrum band divisions. Much of the related literature discussing optical, multispectral, satellite-derived forestry or agriculture vegetation health describes experiences from the United States, Europe, and China. A number of studies for remotely sensed Eucalypt assemblages in an Australian context were consulted [10,11]. In particular, koala habitat assemblage characteristics that frame the original koala habitat manager’s toolbox [3] informed the selection of vegetation health proxies: (1) open woodland species of Eucalyptus and non-Eucalyptus foliage for food, shelter and social behaviour; (2) tree size in the 40–80 cm diameter size class with well-developed crowns; (3) a preference for riparian vegetation with relatively fertile soil and higher leaf water content during dryer conditions. The knowledge synthesis suggested that the following vegetation health indices derived from satellite instruments were suitable using the selection criteria so far established:
  • Normalised Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI)—a numerical dimensionless indicator of plant ‘greenness’ or photosynthetic activity that uses the visible and near-infrared bands of the electromagnetic spectrum [12].
  • Normalised Difference Red-Edge Index (NDRE)—similar to NDVI but suitable for detecting plant foliar stress earlier than NDVI and a consequence of satellite radiometric design incorporating a ‘red-edge spectral capability [13].
  • Leaf Area Index (LAI)—a dimensionless quantity that characterises plant canopies—the one-sided green leaf area per unit ground surface area in broadleaf canopies [14]. LAI is a vegetation health index related to climate feedback [15].
  • Equivalent Water Thickness (EWT) is a leaf moisture proxy using a mid-infrared band available on some imagers for characterising moisture absorption [16].
Other indices and vegetation health proxies exist, particularly permutations and combinations of those noted above. Some indices require further complex biophysical parameter database collection (or ‘look-up’ tables). Some indices require complicated algorithms from specialist software. These would not meet an aim of the ‘toolbox’ to document practical vegetation index maps for non-spatial science habitat managers, preferably free of charge. In an Australian remote sensing service context, these include: (1) the Fraction of Photo-synthetically Absorbed Radiation (FPAR) index—the fraction of absorbed photo-synthetically active radiation that a plant canopy absorbs for photosynthesis and growth [17]; and (2) foliage projective cover (FPC)—the percentage of ground area occupied by the vertical projection of foliage [11].
The literature notes that some indices, and linear equation derivations of the indices, for which equation coefficients vary, are suited to certain tree families or genera. The indices noted above are, within limitations, reasonably generic, easily calculated, used widely, and suitable for monitoring koala habitat health.
The chosen vegetation health indices are further described below, noting the electromagnetic radiation spectrum wavelength classification for each. This detail provides the satellite band specifications required in selecting a suitable instrument for koala habitat health monitoring:
  • NDVI—satellite band ratio of red (R) and near-infrared (NIR) band reflectance [12,18]:
    NDVI = (NIR842 − R665)/(NIR842 + R665)
  • NDRE—satellite band ratio of NIR reflectance and another NIR reflectance where the band radiometric wavelength is close to the R band (known as a ‘red-edge’ or RE band) reflectance [13]:
    NDRE = (NIR842 − RE703.8)/(NIR842 + RE703.8)
  • LAI—there are many algorithms for calculating the LAI vegetation index [19,20,21]. The LAI used in the present study is the modified simple ratio (MSR) that can be linearly related to LAI [22]:
    MSR = (NIR842/R665 − 1)/(SQRT(NIR842 + R665) + 1)
  • EWT—this index is constructed from satellite short-wave infra-red (SWIR) reflectance located at electromagnetic energy wavelengths known to be absorbed by water (~1.6 µm) [16]:
    EWT = SWIR1600/NIR820

2.2. Satellite Imager Selection

Government programs or commercial entities operate many earth monitoring satellite imagers. Each satellite has specifically designed characteristics and consequently varying spatial, temporal, and radiometric specifications. Often, the trauma of launch and ongoing technical failures in space causes agencies to deprecate these design characteristics. The selection of instruments becomes a trade-off of design and operating instrument characteristics. Furthermore, some operating agencies (primarily commercial) charge for output image products—and some are free of charge. Not surprisingly, the finer spatial resolution image products generally incur a charge through third-party commercial providers.
The requirements for image outputs for the koala habitat manager’s toolbox included: (1) inexpensive (or indeed ‘free of cost’) imagery; (2) a reasonable time revisit cycle to obtain images at a user-selected time that are free of cloud; (3) radiometric capabilities capable of deriving the vegetation health proxies; and (4) a spatial resolution that suitably represents a given koala habitat region. The trade-off of these parameters eliminates several potentially useful instruments noted further in Table A1 of Appendix A.
For example, ultra-high spatial resolution imagers (such as the Maxar WorldView or GeoEye series) were not further considered. While having, in some cases, sub-metre spatial resolution, the image products are expensive—and are subject to a prenegotiated image acquisition tasking process not suitable for the stakeholders. Satellite images from such instruments cannot reliably be ordered ‘off-the-shelf’ for a given place and time without prearranged instrument tasking. Furthermore, some of these instruments do not have a short-wave infrared (SWIR) band suitable for deriving EWT maps.
Long-standing, free-of-charge products from NASA and the United States Geological Service (USGS) satellite image stores have suitable revisit times and radiometric specifications—but their spatial resolutions of 30-m (LandSat) and 250-m to 1-km (MODIS) are not optimal for the scale of koala habitats. At this resolution, the reflectance values of individual pixels are the average values from a mix of land-cover components within a given pixel. An image processing technique in the literature known as ‘pixel un-mixing’ requires advanced knowledge and, arguably, are techniques that are not suitable for the koala habitat manager’s toolbox.
Appendix A, documents sensor characteristics for three satellite systems that seem to match the user requirements: (1) Maxar RapidEye; (2) the European Space Agency (ESA) Sentinel-2; and (3) from France, the SPOT series of satellites. RapidEye and SPOT images incur an expense, whereas Sentinel-2 images are free of charge.
The ESA Sentinel-2 program is two satellites, which combined allow for a 5-day revisit cycle. The relatively short 5-day revisit cycle is helpful for vegetation mapping because of the reflectance changes brought about by phenological phases [23]. Sentinel-2 has appropriate radiometric characteristics, a moderate 10-m spatial resolution and, importantly, these are free-of-charge. The Multi-spectral Instrument (MSI) onboard Sentinel-2 has, amongst its 12 bands, three red-edge bands useful for landscape-scale vegetation monitoring [23], and the suitable short-wave infrared bands for generating EWT maps. Band 5 (703.8 nm) was selected for the NDRE map derivation, and Band 11 (1613 nm) was selected for EWT map derivation, where the 20-m pixels were resampled in SNAP to 10-m spatial resolution. The Sentinel-2 radiometric and spatial resolution specifications are noted in Table A3 of Appendix A.
The Maxar RapidEye suite of five instruments also allows for an adequate revisit cycle (5 days), practical radiometric resolution (although without the moisture-absorbing short-wave infrared band), and a 5-m spatial resolution (Table A2 of Appendix A). RapidEye images can be procured at a reasonable cost. The present project compares RapidEye images to evaluate if the 5-m spatial resolution provides vegetation mapping benefits over the Sentinel-2 10-m resolution images—and thus justifies the cost.

2.3. Image Processing Software Selection

Several sophisticated software programs exist to process multi-band satellite reflectance images into maps of vegetation indices; among others, geographic information systems (GIS) such as ESRI ArcGIS; and bespoke satellite image processing programs such as Erdas Imagine, Harris Technologies ENVI, and an object-oriented image processing approach known as eCognition. All these ‘industrial strength’ image processing platforms incur a considerable cost per license. There are function-rich GIS platforms free of charge—but operators require a high level of training and experience to use them for satellite image processing. Not all koala habitat managers wish to master a fully fledged GIS. None of these packages meet the ‘user requirements’ aim of preferably being free of charge and simple to use.
The ESA Copernicus Program provides a satellite image processing software system free of charge. The ‘Sentinel Application Platform’ (SNAP) is a functionally rich application capable of deriving the vegetation indices chosen specifically for the ESA Sentinel constellation of satellite imagers.
SNAP is available for a Microsoft Windows, Linux or Apple MacOS operating system platform.
SNAP requires some experience and training to use—consequently, the Koala Habitat Manager’s Toolbox guides users in: (1) the creation of a Copernicus user account; (2) downloading and installing SNAP, and (3) step-by-step guidance to derive the selected vegetation index maps.

2.4. Methods—Vegetation Health Indices Field Measurements

In a field campaign visiting four koala habitats in Queensland, selected vegetation health indices were measured. The fieldwork data were collected using established processes developed by the Australian remote sensing research community. The northern Australian drier season dates were chosen to maximise the likelihood that field campaign days would align with cloud-free satellite imagery acquisition.
The four fieldwork sites (Figure 1) were visited as follows:
  • July 2018—St Bees Island (off the coast near Mackay CQ).
  • August 2018—Minerva Hills National Park (near Emerald CQ).
  • August 2018—Daisy Hill Conservation Park (south of the City of Brisbane).
  • August 2018—private property ‘Hollow Log’ in the vicinity of Mt Byron and D’Aguilar National Park (northwest of the City of Brisbane).
Procedures for gathering biophysical parameter map ground-truthing data were designed according to documented practices of the satellite remote sensing community. Field data collection processes vary according to the target satellite spatial resolution to be compared. For example, when ground-truthing the 30-m pixel sizes of LandSat, Held et al. [11] recommend a specific star transect design. For instruments of finer spatial resolution, weighted averages of clustered field measurements are recommended [24].
At each of the four koala habitat field locations, 25 groups of five separate measurements were obtained for LAI and EWT (physical leaf collection described further below). The five measurements were obtained within a radius of 20 m from a location defined by a Global Positioning System (GPS)-measured latitude/longitude—to account for the Sentinel-2 pixel size (RGB and NIR bands at 10-m and the TIR band at 20-m spatial resolution). The 25 sites were distributed throughout the koala habitat region. The measurements were obtained between 10:00 and 14:00 h so that they related to the approximate mid-day satellite overpass of Sentinel-2 and RapidEye. The satellite images themselves were acquired plus/minus seven days of the field site visit dates to ensure consistent validation given phenology time frames, but also to maximise the acquisition of images on cloud-free days, a characteristic of optical satellite instruments.
Note that the satellite NDVI and NDRE maps are not validated with field site measurements because NDVI and NDRE are indirect plant photosynthetic health proxies; and the technical means for obtaining ‘similar to satellite’ NDVI/NDRE field measurements is difficult. There are handheld spectroradiometers for field measuring NDVI/NDRE, but they are either: individual leaf measurements; or multispectral band quantities that are a ground-level ‘looking up’ measurement rather than the satellite sun-illuminated measurement—the measurements are not the same. Another method of ground-truthing NDVI is to use a Remotely Piloted Aerial System (RPAS) [25]. In general terms, NDVI/NDRE are well known and well-tested proxies of vegetation health—and it is better to field measure biophysical parameters such as LAI [26,27].
Each measurement site was recorded with a Global Positioning System (GPS) location. The GPS was a Garmin GPSMAP 64 with an accuracy of ±3 m, generally given the number of positional satellites available.
LAI values were collected with an ACCUPAR LP-80 canopy density meter. The LP-80 calculates LAI in real-time. The LP-80 instrument operator acquired a reference above-canopy light measurement at each cluster before making the five per cluster below-canopy measurements. These measurements were taken at an instrument height of approximately 1.3-m from the ground to limit lower biota storey light interactions. The operator was careful to exclude any shadow of themselves falling on the LP-80 measurement antenna.
The project used the method to store and analyse water content in leaves from Jin et al. [28]. Five potential koala food trees were selected in a cluster, as previously described. Ten leaves were collected as close to the top of the canopy as possible using a telescopic pole saw.
Leaves were placed in a plastic zip-lock bag after the empty bag had been weighed. Leaves and bags were weighed using an analytical balance. A few drops of water were poured into the bag, and leaves were refrigerated at 4 °C with a field refrigerator to avoid desiccation and decomposition before analysis in the laboratory.
The ten leaves from each tree were placed into a paper bag after weighing the empty bag. Leaves inside the paper bag were weighed after being oven-dried at 60 °C until the weight plateau had been reached. The paper bag was weighed again when the leaves were still warm.
The leaf water content (LWC) was calculated using the formula:
Water   content   ( % ) = W f W d W f × 100
where: Wf = fresh weight; Wd = dry weight.

2.5. Satellite Image Processing

Maxar RapidEye multispectral images were sourced as geometric, radiometric, and atmospherically corrected images through the Maxar image selection website. A suitable cloud-free image was available for the Minerva Hills NP location on the 30 July 2018. This date is the day before the Minerva Hills NP field trip commenced—and within the seven days between field measurements and imagery acquisition recommended by Grabska et al. [23].
The ESA all-band Sentinel-2 multispectral images were sourced from the Copernicus Program data repository as geometric, radiometric, and atmospherically rectified images (Level-2A). Some of the Sentinel-2 images in the repository at the date of access, were only available at Level-1C processing (missing the step of being atmospherically corrected). In these cases, the atmospheric correction of an image was obtained from the ESA SNAP SEN2COR software addition. The atmospheric correction of images is required for the time series analysis of vegetation health maps [12], and the SNAP process at this step is relatively simple—just time-consuming.
The multi-band RapidEye images were processed into NDVI, NDRE, LAI maps using the SNAP software processing the equations noted in the literature review section. Since RapidEye does not have a TIR band, an EWT map could not be created for this instrument.
The multi-band Sentinel-2 images were processed into NDVI, NDRE, LAI, and EWT maps using the SNAP software processing of index equations noted in the literature review section. SNAP contains an automated Sentinel-2 LAI map production routine—although no documentation could be found to ascertain the algorithm that has been coded by ESA, despite a written request. This SNAP function makes for easier LAI processing by a koala habitat manager—and comparisons with the LAI equation indicated map parity.
The difference between wet and dry season Sentinel-2 based vegetation health maps is created with a simple arithmetic difference operation in the ESA SNAP software. This process can be used to compare vegetation health trends for ENSO climate states—during the years identified as El-Nino, La-Nina and ENSO neutral conditions by climate studies [29,30].
The various SNAP satellite images, vegetation health indexes and map production routines were written up as ‘recipes’ in the Koala Habitat Manger’s Toolbox.

2.6. Field and Map Correlation

The field measurements of LAI and LWC were compared with the satellite-derived vegetation health indices, LAI and EWT respectively, at the same location in the maps, as averaged values per cluster, using Pearson’s linear correlation analysis.
A proprietary Geographic Information System (GIS) ESRI ArcGIS Desktop was used to compare the SNAP produced maps with the field-measured parameters. The GeoTIFF maps were loaded into ArcGIS, as were the field measurement data as GIS point shapefiles. The mapping- and field-collected data were explored with summary statistics to review adherence to Gaussian analysis prerequisites. No further data detrending or transformation processes were required to achieve a normal distribution of the individual datasets. Note that we did not undertake specific probability interval tests, as the focus of the comparison was a ‘fit for purpose’ assessment to meet the user requirements of a habitat manager’s toolkit—not a validation of Sentinel-2 imagery perse, since that verification has been assessed in the literature (Section 2.2).
A GIS ‘extract to points’ process was used to create a data file of measurements for correlation analysis. The Pearson correlation coefficient and scatter plot line fitting were carried out in Microsoft Excel.

3. Results—Vegetation Health Indices

3.1. RapidEye Compared to Sentinel-2

A comparison of Maxar RapidEye and ESA Sentinel-2 images is located in Appendix B. Figure A1 compares two ‘true colour’ (RGB), and two NDVI images for a section of the Minerva Hills National Park—known koala habitat on relatively flat land. The 5-m spatial resolution of RapidEye does not seem to provide an advantage over Sentinel-2 in subjectively visualising the vegetation condition of the National Park.
For a subjective assessment of vegetation condition, purely using the ‘true colour’ images as one would an aerial photograph, RapidEye exhibits a minor visual acuity advantage over Sentinel-2. Note that ultra and very high spatial resolution satellite images provide more apparent landcover features, but the temporal, spectral, and cost limitations are discussed.
The Figure A1 NDVI maps derived from the RapidEye and Sentinel-2 images indicate, from a visual assessment perspective, no advantage in using the RapidEye finer spatial resolution—although the images are of slightly different dates, they provide a similar map for NDVI.
Table 1 compares the Pearson correlation coefficient analysis of RapidEye and Sentinel-2 images at measurement sites: (1) satellite NDVI and measured LAI; (2) satellite NDRE and measured LAI; and (3) measured and satellite LAI. The respective scatter plots are detailed in Appendix C.
The correlation analysis and a subjective review of vegetation index maps indicate no advantage in using RapidEye images at a 5-m spatial resolution to the ESA Sentinel-2 images at a 10-m spatial resolution for vegetation health mapping on a landscape scale. Indeed, the comparisons of field and image data for both NDVI and NDRE of Table 1 indicate that Sentinel-2 images have a slightly better correlation than RapidEye. NDRE (verses NDVI) maps provide an indication of early vegetation health improvement related to available moisture in Eucalyptus assemblages. Given these results and that RapidEye images incur an expense and do not possess a SWIR band suitable for EWT maps, the koala habitat manger’s toolbox uses Sentinel-2 images to produce a time series of proxies for vegetation health monitoring.

3.2. Field-measured and Satelite Image-Derived Parameter Correlation

The linear regressed Pearson correlation coefficient (R2) graphs comparing the field measured and satellite-derived vegetation health indexes are located in Appendix C:
  • The four scatter plots at Figure A3 compare field-measured LAI with Sentinel-2 derived LAI maps for the four fieldwork site locations.
  • The four scatter plots at Figure A4 compare field-measured LAI with Sentinel-2 derived NDVI maps for the four fieldwork site locations.
  • The four scatter plots at Figure A5 compare field-measured LAI with Sentinel-2 derived NDRE maps for the four fieldwork site locations.
  • The four scatter plots at Figure A6 compare field measured LWC with Sentinel-2 derived EWT maps for the four fieldwork site locations. Note that lower values of EWT, which is the ratio of reflectance in the red and NIR bands, indicates higher leaf water content [16].
We chose to compare LAI with NDVI and NDRE at the four field sites because, as described earlier, field measurements of NDVI/NDRE were not obtained for the reasons outlined, and because all three indices are spectral band ratios, there is a discussed nonlinear relationship between them which is worth exploring [21].
For the Minerva Hills NP field-site (Figure A3, Figure A4 and Figure A5), the R2 values indicate a moderate correlation between LAI/LAI, LAI/NDVI and LAI/NDRE. For the other three sites, St Bees Island, Daisy Hill CP, and ‘Hollow Log’ Mt. Byron (Figure A3, Figure A4 and Figure A5), there is little correlation between any of the NDVI/NDRE/LAI comparisons. The lack of correlation between the dependent and independent variables in these cases is likely explained by the Sentinel-2 10 m pixel size and the consequent averaging of a spectral response to mixed land cover types. These results are similar to the correlation of Sentinel-2 LAI and NDVI maps (for the case of mangroves) found by Manna et al. [25].
There is little correlation with EWT/LWC at the Minerva Hills NP and St Bees Island sites—and only a slight correlation at the Daisy Hill CP and Mt. Byron sites (Figure A6).
The LWC/EWT correlation analysis scatter plots for three sites exhibit very low variance and no correlation (Figure A6). The minimum to maximum range of values for both axes is limited—for LWC between 40 and 60% and a varying range for EWT; between 0.6 and 1.3 for Minerva Hills NP and 0.4 to 0.7 at St Bees Island and Daisy Hill CP. The EWT/LWC correlation exhibits a more linear but near-zero correlation for Mt Byron—and a negative correlation is expected, given that lower EWT values indicate higher LWC. The different clustering patterns per site may indicate the effect of different tree species at the field sites. While clustering precludes a functional linear correlation analysis, a useful graphical visualisation of the LWC and EWT relationship is noted.

3.3. Satellite-Derived Vegetation Health Proxy Maps

The Sentinel-2 NDVI/NDRE values can be generally interpreted to equate to land cover as follows:
  • below 0.3 as rock, sand or built environment;
  • from 0.3 to around 0.6, grassland and some open woodland; and
  • 0.6 to 0.8 rainforest land cover.
The pertinent interest for koala habitat managers is the mapped visualisation of NDVI/NDRE values increasing or decreasing on a trend basis, illustrating either land-cover change or changing vegetation photosynthetic health. The maps indicate areas that could be further examined ‘on the ground’ with a closer vegetative species-based inspection. NDRE can be an early indicator of vegetation stress than NDVI [13]—and the NDRE map for Minerva Hills NP received a higher R2 value (0.61) comparing NDRE and LAI than the NDVI/LAI map (0.5), an expected outcome given that the image acquisition dates were obtained comparatively early on in the dry season.
A two-date–time set of mapped vegetation indices (NDVI, LAI and EWT) for each of the four field sites is located in Appendix D. The ‘difference’ map illustrates the different degrees to which the landscape generally, and at specific locations, gained, retained, or lost vegetation health. These maps reveal a trend in vegetation health. For such experienced stakeholders, these maps show the areas where a closer field inspection may be warranted.
For the biophysical parameter difference maps, one image is acquired during a wet period and the other for a dry period. Monthly accumulated rainfall in mm for the four sites for 2017 and 2018 was obtained from the Australian Government, Bureau of Meteorology climate data repository (http://www.bom.gov.au/climate/data/ (accessed on 30 June 2019)), as shown in Appendix E—and used to choose the ‘wet season image acquisition dates’. Utilising Appendix E, the image dates for wet/dry periods were as follows in Table 2.
The derived maps for all sites and vegetation indices (Appendix D) reveal trends in vegetation health. EWT maps effectively show the drying of biological features in the landscape between wet and dry period images. It is also clear that the interpretation of images best rests with those very familiar with the landforms and vegetation cover of any given koala habitat.

3.4. Minerva Hills NP

The vegetation health index difference maps for Minerva Hills NP (Appendix D Figure A7, Figure A8 and Figure A9) show for a period of March to July 2018, a koala habitat-wide decrease in leaf water content, a decrease in the percentage of canopy leaf coverage and areal patches that vary in photosynthetic health trend—some patches increasing and some decreasing, based on the amount of bare ground, grassland, and dominant species of shrub/tree in different locations consistent with seasonal change.
In the alluvial plain koala habitat and surrounding areas of Minerva Hills NP:
  • NDVI (photosynthetic health);
    declined in ground cover made up predominately of grasses,
    declined in patches in a riparian zone—some areas of the stream bed allow for more resilient vegetation (narrow-leafed ironbark),
    appeared to provide more biota resilient conditions (for the period of image difference) on low ridgelines adjacent to the alluvial plain, and
    is uneven across the habitat range (on a tree species basis).
  • LAI (leaf area with respect to the ground area);
    in areas of grass exhibited neutral changes (as expected for LAI),
    declined in patches in a riparian zone, and
    iron-barks adjacent to the stream suffered the least decline.
  • EWT (a proxy for leaf water content);
    strongly declined in areas of bare ground (as expected for EWT),
    declined in patches in a riparian zone, generally more neutral declines than NDVI or LAI,
    indicated grassland drying, and
    iron-barks adjacent to the stream suffered the least decline suggesting species resilience.

3.5. St Bees Island

Being careful to account for the cloud contamination in the wet season image of St Bees Island—the time series difference (Appendix D Figure A10, Figure A11 and Figure A12) shows for a period of April to October 2017 that, generally speaking, minor vegetation health decline for NDVI, LAI, or EWT in eucalypt woodland and forest. Despite that, declines in LAI and EWT are evident in the Eucalyptus tereticornis (QLD forest red gum) and Eucalyptus platyphylla (poplar gum) communities that form the koala habitat on this island. The map change detection indicates seasonal vegetation health changes.
In the koala habitat and adjacent areas of St Bees Island:
  • NDVI;
    declined little in the perennial and littoral rainforest and mangrove regions,
    declined somewhat for poplar gums (but less than for Minerva Hills NP) and the QLD forest red gum, and
    declined for grass-cover.
  • LAI;
    provided more variability than the NDVI change detection indicating patchy leaf area decline but continuing photosynthetic health generally,
    for the rainforest (subject to further inspection) may indicate vine thicket phenological cycle, and
    poplar gums exhibit decline, and QLD forest red gum marked decline.
  • EWT;
    some widespread leaf water content decline in poplar gum areas (not substantial),
    a stronger decline for QLD forest red gum—for this habitat, a significant koala food tree, and
    slight difference in rainforest assemblages.

3.6. Daisy Hill CP

The time series difference maps for Daisy Hill CP (due to space constraints not shown in Appendix D but available on request) show, for the period March to August 2018, a koala habitat-wide marked decrease in photosynthetic health, a significant decline in the percentage of canopy leaf coverage, and a somewhat neutral loss of habitat-wide leaf water content.
In the koala habitat and adjacent areas of Daisy Hill CP:
  • NDVI;
    indicated taller and more comprehensive tree crown environment than the other three sites,
    and a neutral change, and
    the per-pixel values of the index would be less influenced by understory and groundcover species.
  • LAI;
    indicated more vegetation stage change than NDVI—a mosaic mottling of decreasing LAI—the extent to which this map indicates issues for koala food tree species in this location should be examined, and
    the March image has a cloud shadow contamination—an area evident in the east side of the image, mid-way between north and south.
  • EWT;
    Indicated neutral leaf water loss across the seasons for this particular time series, and
    the small areas that appeared to retain higher water content into the dry season may be related to landscape location (this could be further examined).

3.7. Mt Byron

The time series difference maps for the environs of the ‘Hollow Log’ property (due to space constraints not shown in Appendix D but available on request) show, for a period April to September 2018, a koala habitat-wide significant loss of leaf water content and a moderate level of photosynthetic health and percentage of canopy leaf coverage decline.
In the koala habitat and adjacent areas of the ‘Hollow Log’ property:
  • NDVI;
    indicated a strong seasonal phenological stage signal—declining grass photosynthetic health is most apparent, and
    while considering the image processing impact of terrain slope, north-facing vegetation has suffered the most decline.
  • LAI—as for NDVI;
  • EWT—areas in the landscape that show small retention of leaf water content need to be further examined to understand the mapping result.

4. Discussion

The image processing ‘recipes’ have been written up in the koala habitat managers’ toolbox—and are reasonably straightforward enough to be used by non-spatial science-trained image users.
Several stakeholder meetings were undertaken to review and test the koala habitat manager’s toolbox, including the satellite image-derived vegetation health index processing ‘recipes’ [5]. The project reached out to a range of Government, not-for-profit, and university-based koala habitat research staff seeking comment on the draft koala habitat manager’s toolbox.
The applied research into the free-of-charge derivation of satellite remotely sensed imagery of koala habitat health indices has identified that the ESA Sentinel-2 multispectral instrument and SNAP image processing software is suitable for the temporal analysis of vegetation health proxies; NDVI, NDRE, LAI, and EWT. While a linear correlation analysis of these indices from field-measured and the satellites derived maps was generally inconclusive; the stakeholder user requirements of: (1) capability to observe vegetation health to trigger closer inspection and possible management intervention; (2) at a suitable temporal resolution; (3) free of cost (images and image processing software); and (4) ease of use for abinitio satellite image processing practitioners, were met. In discussions with the stakeholders, we noted that the image sets were deemed useful to experienced habitat managers who knew their real estate well.
One of the reasons for the lack of correlation comparing satellite NDVI and LAI in three of the four sites is conjectured to be an artefact of the Sentinel-2 pixel size of 10-m. The single value of reflectance in a 10 m × 10 m pixel represents the average irradiance/radiance ratio of possibly several shrub and tree species and various landcover elements, if the canopy has gaps or is otherwise thin. The stakeholders of the koala habitat managers’ toolbox indicated that the temporal resolution and cost factors outweigh the less-than-ideal spatial resolution, especially for establishing seasonal or inter-annual trends in vegetation health.
The clustering of the satellite EWT and measured LWC leaf moisture comparisons at three of the four field sites (St Bees Island, Minerva Hills National Park and Daisy Hill Conservation Park) evident in Appendix C Figure A6 suggests that a strong relationship between the satellite proxy and the biophysical measure may well be established based on less heterogeneous species assamblages. This aspect, with respect to satellite imager spatial resolution, deserves further research. Furthermore, as discussed in the present Section 2.1, we note that the use of Sentinel-2 NDVI, LAI, and EWT as proxies for monitoring habitat health trends has a strong foundation in the literature.
In comparison, the literature notes that ultra and very high spatial resolution imagers exhibit far stronger Pearson correlation coefficients compared with field-measured vegetation health proxies with fine spatial resolution satellite platforms (Ikonos, WorldView, GeoEye, and others) and hosted instruments, because each pixel represents much fewer plant species or the ground cover diversity of reflectance [18]. These studies improve confidence in the use of the vegetation indices. As discussed, these images are expensive to both acquire and process to a limited number of vegetation indices (i.e., not EWT, and sometimes not NDRE) and do not provide phenological useful revisit times. Hyper-spectral instruments, principally those hosted on airborne platforms rather than a satellite, provide radiometric bands sufficient for EWT maps—but require logistically expensive campaigns to acquire a limited suite of images suitable for time series analysis. The airborne hyperspectral compact airborne spectrographic imager (CASI) has been used to derive very useful maps of vegetation health proxies of koala habitat, as well as a valuable capacity to map vegetation species [10].
Arguably the most helpful habitat manager’s assessment from the satellite imagery is comparing images over time to understand the trend of habitat health. While a simple two image time series is shown in this present report (Appendix D), Nouri et al. [12] document a three image time-series analysis process called the ‘vegetation recovery rate’ (VRR). On a per-pixel basis, three vegetation index maps for three different dates (N0, N1 and N2) are processed using the ratio:
VRR = (N2 − N1)/(N0 − N1) × 100%
The resultant map indicates the trend in vegetation health as a single index beyond a subjective map inspection—and would be a helpful extension of the Koala Habitat Manager’s Toolbox at a later document update.
The time series analysis of vegetation indices can be similarly compared between periods of ENSO climate variation—La Nina (trending wetter for the central east of Australia), neutral, and El Nino periods. The two time/date images of Appendix D show what type of image data would result, although limited to the Sentinel-2 archive beginning in early 2016.
A future update of the koala habitat manager’s toolbox could include recent research by Zhang et al. [31]. They detail a process to derive leaf water content maps from the algebraic ratio of two shortwave infrared bands. Their results suggest better-correlated results than the EWT calculation undertaken in this present report.
Optical satellite remote sensing images have several limitations. This study highlights the trade-off of spatial resolution with instrument revisit schedules and their design parameters around spectral wavelengths. Ultra or very high spatial resolution images provide tree-crown scale image fidelity—but are expensive, with limited temporal and radiometric characteristics. Optical instruments also suffer from cloud contamination. The closer to tropical regions, the more likely a given image on a required date will have cloudy pixels, thus hampering vegetation health mapping.
A careful review of the Appendix D images and maps will indicate that terrain shadow creates skewed vegetation index values—an artefact of land aspect light interaction and thus varying degrees of insolation available to be measured by the satellite. The remote sensing literature includes terrain shadow correction images [9], but these require advanced processing not available in SNAP. Furthermore, an experienced habitat manager will soon subjectively correct their assessment of vegetation health for this anomaly as a matter of experience.
For this present research project, RPAS-hosted instruments have been intentionally left out of the project scope. On the one hand, RPAS offers unprecedented spatial resolution and can be deployed to suit the monitoring requirements of a habitat manager. On the other, using an RPAS to cover the same spatial extent as a satellite would be an arduous, expensive, and long-term project commitment. Furthermore, the use of RPAS does not meet the financial user requirements perspective inherent in this present study. The hardware and image processing software is expensive, as is operator training and (in Australia) Civil Aviation Safety Authority accreditation. Furthermore, the availability of RPAS payload instrumentation with shortwave infrared bands to map EWT is limited.

5. Conclusions

The koala habitat manager’s toolbox is provided to government, not-for-profit and private managers of koala habitat. The authors trust that the toolbox is fit for purpose and is further widely utilised, as stakeholders indicated in the briefings and workshops undertaken.

Author Contributions

Research and logistics management and science supervision by A.M. Study concept design, image processing and manuscript writing by M.H. Research methods undertaken by F.S. All authors undertook the field work. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This research was funded by the Queensland Government, Department of Environment and Science Community Sustainability Action Grants Round 1—Koala Research (CSAR17023).

Acknowledgments

The authors acknowledge the time and expertise commitment of volunteers past and present under the umbrella of the Koala Research—Central Queensland collective. The authors thank the Queensland Government, Department of Environment and Science staff and rangers who assisted at workshops, vetted documentation as well as National Park access. Queensland State Government permit number WITK8748518 was issued under the provisions of the Nature Conservation (Administration) Regulation 2017. The authors also thank the owners of the ‘Hollow Log’ property Mt. Byron for access and their kind hospitality. The satellite image processes described in this document utilise the European Space Agency, Copernicus ‘Observing the Earth Program’ Sentinel-2 Satellite and the Science Toolbox Exploitation Program (STEP) image processing software. RapidEye imagery was provided by Maxar Technologies under their academic and research access license to the DigitalGlobe EarthWatch satellite imagery repository.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Appendix A. Satellite Imager Specifications

Table A1. Key satellite optical imager specifications for comparison.
Table A1. Key satellite optical imager specifications for comparison.
InstrumentSat
No
Spatial
Resolution (m)
Swath
Width (km)
Spectral
Bands
Revisit
(Days)
Data
Available
WorldView210.5/216.4PCBGYRRENNA2009+
WorldView310.31/1.2413.1PCBGRRENNA2014+
GeoEye-110.41–0.46/215.2PBGRNA2008+
Pleiades20.5/220PBGRNA2012+
QuickBird10.61/2.4416.5PBGRN-2002–2014
Ikonos10.83/3.211PBGRN-1999–2014
SPOT-1 to 4110/20120PGRNS-1986–2012
SPOT-512.5/10120PGRNS-2002–2014
SPOT-6/721.5/660PBGRN52013+
ALOS12.5/1070PBGRN-2006–2011
RE5577BGRREN12009+
SkySats130.8/12PBRGN52017+
CubeSats1753/4 BGRN12017+
Sentinel-2210–60290BGRNNSS52016+
Spatial resolution—first number is panchromatic band/second visible RGB. Spectral bands: P = panchromatic; Visible: C = shorter wave blue, B = blue, G = green, R = red; N = near infra-red (NN = 2 or more NIR bands), RE = NIR ‘red edge’; S = short-wave infrared. Revisit—A = ‘adjusted to location by liaison with the vendor’.
Table A2. RapidEye imager specifications.
Table A2. RapidEye imager specifications.
Number of Satellites5
Orbit Altitude630 km in Sun-synchronous orbit
Equator Crossing Time11:00 am local time (approximately)
Sensor TypeMulti-spectral push broom imager
Spectral BandsBlue440–510 nm
Green520–590
Red630–685
Red Edge690–730
NIR760–850
Pixel size (orthorectified)5 m
Swath Width77 km
Revisit time5 days (at nadir)
Dynamic Range12 bit
Table A3. Sentinel-2 imager specifications.
Table A3. Sentinel-2 imager specifications.
Spatial Resolution
(metres)
Band NumberS2AS2B
Central Wavelength (nm)Bandwidth (nm)Central Wavelength (nm)Bandwidth (nm)
102496.698492.198
1035604555946
104664.53866539
108835.1145833133
205703.919703.820
206740.218739.118
207782.528779.728
208a864.83386432
20111613.71431610.4141
20122202.42422185.7238
601443.927442.345
60994526943.227
60101373.5751376.976

Appendix B. Spatial Resolution Sentinel-2 and RapidEye

Figure A1. Comparing the subjective map user visual acuity of Sentinel-2 (S2) images (10 m spatial resolution) and RapidEye (RE) images (3 m) for an area within the Minerva Hills National Park (located Northwest of the Queeensland, Australia town of Springsure: lattitude −24.12, longitude 148.09): (a) RE true-colour 25 September 2017, (b) S2 true-colour 30 July 2018; (c) RE Normalised Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI); and (d) S2 NDVI.
Figure A1. Comparing the subjective map user visual acuity of Sentinel-2 (S2) images (10 m spatial resolution) and RapidEye (RE) images (3 m) for an area within the Minerva Hills National Park (located Northwest of the Queeensland, Australia town of Springsure: lattitude −24.12, longitude 148.09): (a) RE true-colour 25 September 2017, (b) S2 true-colour 30 July 2018; (c) RE Normalised Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI); and (d) S2 NDVI.
Remotesensing 14 02119 g0a1

Appendix C. Comparing Fieldwork and Satellite Vegetation Indexes

Figure A2. Comparing clustered field measured LAI with RapidEye LAI, NDVI, NDRE for Minerva Hills National Park.
Figure A2. Comparing clustered field measured LAI with RapidEye LAI, NDVI, NDRE for Minerva Hills National Park.
Remotesensing 14 02119 g0a2
Figure A3. Comparing field measured and Sentinel-2 clusters LAI.
Figure A3. Comparing field measured and Sentinel-2 clusters LAI.
Remotesensing 14 02119 g0a3
Figure A4. Comparing field measured LAI and Sentinel-2 clusters NDVI.
Figure A4. Comparing field measured LAI and Sentinel-2 clusters NDVI.
Remotesensing 14 02119 g0a4
Figure A5. Comparing field measured and Sentinel-2 clusters NDRE.
Figure A5. Comparing field measured and Sentinel-2 clusters NDRE.
Remotesensing 14 02119 g0a5
Figure A6. Comparing field measured LWC and Sentinel-2 clusters EWT.
Figure A6. Comparing field measured LWC and Sentinel-2 clusters EWT.
Remotesensing 14 02119 g0a6

Appendix D. Vegetation Index Maps

The following six figures showcase vegetation indices for a wet period and a dry period and the difference between the two indicating a time series of vegetation health proxy trend.
Figure A7. Minerva Hills NP NDVI Difference.
Figure A7. Minerva Hills NP NDVI Difference.
Remotesensing 14 02119 g0a7
Figure A8. Minerva Hills NP LAI Difference.
Figure A8. Minerva Hills NP LAI Difference.
Remotesensing 14 02119 g0a8
Figure A9. Minerva Hills NP EWT Difference.
Figure A9. Minerva Hills NP EWT Difference.
Remotesensing 14 02119 g0a9
Figure A10. St Bees Island NDVI Difference.
Figure A10. St Bees Island NDVI Difference.
Remotesensing 14 02119 g0a10
Figure A11. St Bees Island LAI Difference.
Figure A11. St Bees Island LAI Difference.
Remotesensing 14 02119 g0a11
Figure A12. St Bees Island EWT Difference.
Figure A12. St Bees Island EWT Difference.
Remotesensing 14 02119 g0a12

Appendix E. Rainfall Data for Selected Locations in the Study Area of Interest

Table A4. Monthly accumulated rainfall in mm for the four field sites in 2017 and 2018. For St Bees Island, the rain gauge at Hamilton Island is used, and for Mt. Byron, the Toogoolawah rain gauge.
Table A4. Monthly accumulated rainfall in mm for the four field sites in 2017 and 2018. For St Bees Island, the rain gauge at Hamilton Island is used, and for Mt. Byron, the Toogoolawah rain gauge.
2017 MonthsSt Bees IslandMinerva HillsDaisy HillMt Byron2018 MonthsSt Bees IslandMinerva HillsDaisy HillMt Byron
1422309137135132853459
244939302261284321138
347520637722232801219570
412801114171115521
5230143324510232819
61139731624176829
761921207923115
8548158052823
910379327211
1010522023316110599170140
11335258621126452530
1216412129412395166270

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Figure 1. Fieldwork locations: red rectangle, field locations in central Queensland; green rectangle, field locations in South-east Queensland.
Figure 1. Fieldwork locations: red rectangle, field locations in central Queensland; green rectangle, field locations in South-east Queensland.
Remotesensing 14 02119 g001
Table 1. Comparing Pearson correlation coefficients (R2) for measured LAI and satellite NDVI, NDRE and LAI for RapidEye and Sentinel-2 images and field trips in July 2018.
Table 1. Comparing Pearson correlation coefficients (R2) for measured LAI and satellite NDVI, NDRE and LAI for RapidEye and Sentinel-2 images and field trips in July 2018.
IndicesRapidEyeSentinel-2
R2 for satellite NDVI vs. measured LAI.0.47030.5004
R2 for satellite NDRE vs. measured LAI.0.46880.6079
R2 for satellite LAI vs. measured LAI.0.44580.4765
Table 2. Chosen dates for Sentinel-2 image acquisition for wet and dry season vegetation index comparison.
Table 2. Chosen dates for Sentinel-2 image acquisition for wet and dry season vegetation index comparison.
Field SiteImage Date during a Rain PeriodImage Date during Dry Period
Minerva Hills17 March 201830 July 2018
St Bees Island 1 April 201728 October 2017
Daisy Hill16 March 201823 August 2018
Mt. Byron10 April 20182 September 2018
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Hewson, M.; Santamaria, F.; Melzer, A. Field Testing Satellite-Derived Vegetation Health Indices for a Koala Habitat Managers Toolkit. Remote Sens. 2022, 14, 2119. https://doi.org/10.3390/rs14092119

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Hewson M, Santamaria F, Melzer A. Field Testing Satellite-Derived Vegetation Health Indices for a Koala Habitat Managers Toolkit. Remote Sensing. 2022; 14(9):2119. https://doi.org/10.3390/rs14092119

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Hewson, Michael, Flavia Santamaria, and Alistair Melzer. 2022. "Field Testing Satellite-Derived Vegetation Health Indices for a Koala Habitat Managers Toolkit" Remote Sensing 14, no. 9: 2119. https://doi.org/10.3390/rs14092119

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