Characterization and delineation of caribou habitat on Unimak Island using remote sensing techniques

The assessment of herbivore habitat quality is traditionally based on quantifying the forages available to the animal across their home range through ground-based techniques. While these methods are highly accurate, they can be time-consuming and highly expensive, especially for herbivores that occu...

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Main Author: Atkinson, Brain M.
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Alaska Fairbanks 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=1566796
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spelling ftproquest:oai:pqdtoai.proquest.com:1566796 2023-05-15T15:53:30+02:00 Characterization and delineation of caribou habitat on Unimak Island using remote sensing techniques Atkinson, Brain M. 2014-01-01 00:00:01.0 http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=1566796 ENG eng University of Alaska Fairbanks http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=1566796 Geographic information science|Natural Resource Management|Remote sensing thesis 2014 ftproquest 2021-03-13T17:36:35Z The assessment of herbivore habitat quality is traditionally based on quantifying the forages available to the animal across their home range through ground-based techniques. While these methods are highly accurate, they can be time-consuming and highly expensive, especially for herbivores that occupy vast spatial landscapes. The Unimak Island caribou herd has been decreasing in the last decade at rates that have prompted discussion of management intervention. Frequent inclement weather in this region of Alaska has provided for little opportunity to study the caribou forage habitat on Unimak Island. The overall objectives of this study were two-fold 1) to assess the feasibility of using high-resolution color and near-infrared aerial imagery to map the forage distribution of caribou habitat on Unimak Island and 2) to assess the use of a new high-resolution multispectral satellite imagery platform, RapidEye, and use of the "red-edge" spectral band on vegetation classification accuracy. Maximum likelihood classification algorithms were used to create land cover maps in aerial and satellite imagery. Accuracy assessments and transformed divergence values were produced to assess vegetative spectral information and classification accuracy. By using RapidEye and aerial digital imagery in a hierarchical supervised classification technique, we were able to produce a high resolution land cover map of Unimak Island. We obtained overall accuracy rates of 71.4 percent which are comparable to other land cover maps using RapidEye imagery. The "red-edge" spectral band included in the RapidEye imagery provides additional spectral information that allows for a more accurate overall classification, raising overall accuracy 5.2 percent. Thesis caribou Alaska PQDT Open: Open Access Dissertations and Theses (ProQuest)
institution Open Polar
collection PQDT Open: Open Access Dissertations and Theses (ProQuest)
op_collection_id ftproquest
language English
topic Geographic information science|Natural Resource Management|Remote sensing
spellingShingle Geographic information science|Natural Resource Management|Remote sensing
Atkinson, Brain M.
Characterization and delineation of caribou habitat on Unimak Island using remote sensing techniques
topic_facet Geographic information science|Natural Resource Management|Remote sensing
description The assessment of herbivore habitat quality is traditionally based on quantifying the forages available to the animal across their home range through ground-based techniques. While these methods are highly accurate, they can be time-consuming and highly expensive, especially for herbivores that occupy vast spatial landscapes. The Unimak Island caribou herd has been decreasing in the last decade at rates that have prompted discussion of management intervention. Frequent inclement weather in this region of Alaska has provided for little opportunity to study the caribou forage habitat on Unimak Island. The overall objectives of this study were two-fold 1) to assess the feasibility of using high-resolution color and near-infrared aerial imagery to map the forage distribution of caribou habitat on Unimak Island and 2) to assess the use of a new high-resolution multispectral satellite imagery platform, RapidEye, and use of the "red-edge" spectral band on vegetation classification accuracy. Maximum likelihood classification algorithms were used to create land cover maps in aerial and satellite imagery. Accuracy assessments and transformed divergence values were produced to assess vegetative spectral information and classification accuracy. By using RapidEye and aerial digital imagery in a hierarchical supervised classification technique, we were able to produce a high resolution land cover map of Unimak Island. We obtained overall accuracy rates of 71.4 percent which are comparable to other land cover maps using RapidEye imagery. The "red-edge" spectral band included in the RapidEye imagery provides additional spectral information that allows for a more accurate overall classification, raising overall accuracy 5.2 percent.
format Thesis
author Atkinson, Brain M.
author_facet Atkinson, Brain M.
author_sort Atkinson, Brain M.
title Characterization and delineation of caribou habitat on Unimak Island using remote sensing techniques
title_short Characterization and delineation of caribou habitat on Unimak Island using remote sensing techniques
title_full Characterization and delineation of caribou habitat on Unimak Island using remote sensing techniques
title_fullStr Characterization and delineation of caribou habitat on Unimak Island using remote sensing techniques
title_full_unstemmed Characterization and delineation of caribou habitat on Unimak Island using remote sensing techniques
title_sort characterization and delineation of caribou habitat on unimak island using remote sensing techniques
publisher University of Alaska Fairbanks
publishDate 2014
url http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=1566796
genre caribou
Alaska
genre_facet caribou
Alaska
op_relation http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=1566796
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