Abstract
This study aimed to develop simple remote-sensing techniques suitable for mapping and monitoring
wetlands, using Landsat TM imagery of inland wetland sites in Victoria and New South Wales. A range
of classification methods was examined in attempts to map the location and extent of wetlands and their
vegetation types. Multi-temporal imagery (winter/spring and summer) was used to display seasonal
variability in water regime and vegetation status. Simple density slicing of the mid-infrared band (TM5)
from imagery taken during wet conditions was useful for mapping the location and extent of inundated
areas. None of the classification methods tested reproduced field maps of dominant vegetation species;
however, density slicing of multi-temporal imagery produced classes based on seasonal variation in
water regime and vegetation status that are useful for reconnaissance mapping and for examining
variability in previously mapped units. Satellite imagery is unlikely to replace aerial photography for
detailed mapping of wetland vegetation types, particularly where ecological gradients are steep, as in
many riverine systems. However, it has much to offer in monitoring changes in water regime and in
reconnaissance mapping at regional scales.
Subject
Ecology,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Oceanography
Cited by
106 articles.
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