DocumentCode :
640732
Title :
AAFC annual crop inventory
Author :
Fisette, T. ; Rollin, P. ; Aly, Z. ; Campbell, L. ; Daneshfar, B. ; Filyer, P. ; Smith, A. ; Davidson, A. ; Shang, Jiali ; Jarvis, Ian
Author_Institution :
Agric. & Agri-Food Canada, Ottawa, ON, Canada
fYear :
2013
fDate :
12-16 Aug. 2013
Firstpage :
270
Lastpage :
274
Abstract :
Understanding the state and trends in agriculture production is essential to combat both short-term and long-term threats to stable and reliable access to food for all, and to ensure a profitable agricultural sector. In 2007, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada (AAFC) took its first steps towards the development of an operational software system for mapping the crop types of individual fields using satellite observations. Focusing on the Prairie Provinces in 2009 and 2010, a Decision Tree (DT) based methodology was applied using optical (Landsat-5, AWiFS, DMC, SPOT) and radar (Radarsat-2) imagery. For the 2011 growing season and further years, this activity is extended to other provinces in support of a national crop inventory. At present, this approach can consistently deliver a crop inventory that meets the overall target accuracy of at least 85% at a final spatial resolution of 30m. To achieve full operational status, however, further development is required to optimize the data processing chain. Crop maps covering Canada´s entire agricultural region are typically delivered eight months following the end of the growing season. To better meet the needs of AAFC and its partners, as well as those of potential new users, map delivery needs to be more timely. Indeed, there is considerable demand for two map products: an estimated within-season inventory (released during the growing season) as well as a final end-of-season inventory (released shortly after the end of the growing season). To this end, Earth Observation Service (EOS) staff is implementing a new and fully automated crop classifier that should significantly reduce production time. In 2012, the lack of affordable optical data forced AAFC to rely mostly on RADARSAT-2 data. This brings new challenges, given a doubling of the number of images as compared to 2011. In the coming years, new EO data (Landsat 8, Radarsat Constellation Mission, Sentinel-2) will have a significant positive impact on the quality of the- AAFC crop inventory.
Keywords :
agricultural products; crops; decision trees; geophysical image processing; AAFC annual crop inventory; DT; EOS; Prairie Provinces; RADARSAT-2 data; agricultural region; agriculture and agrifood canada; agriculture production; crop maps; data processing chain; decision tree; earth observation service; national crop inventory; operational software system; profitable agricultural sector; satellite observations; spatial resolution; Accuracy; Agriculture; Earth; Optical imaging; Optical sensors; Remote sensing; Satellites; Agriculture; Classification; Land Cover; Land Use; Remote Sensing;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Agro-Geoinformatics (Agro-Geoinformatics), 2013 Second International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Fairfax, VA
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/Argo-Geoinformatics.2013.6621920
Filename :
6621920
Link To Document :
بازگشت