Using unmanned aerial vehicle multispectral data for monitoring the outcomes of ecological restoration in mining areas

Author:

Chen Zanxu12ORCID,Hou Huping13,Zhang Shaoliang34ORCID,Campbell Tristan2ORCID,Yang Yongjun34ORCID,Tu Mu5,Yuan Yang5,Dixon Kingsley W.2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Public Policy and Management China University of Mining and Technology Xuzhou China

2. ARC Centre for Mine Site Restoration, School of Molecular and Life Sciences Curtin University Perth Western Australia Australia

3. Ministry of Education Engineering Research Center for Mine Ecological Restoration Xuzhou China

4. School of Environment and Spatial Informatics China University of Mining and Technology Xuzhou China

5. Institute of Territorial and Spatial Planning of Inner Mongolia Hohhot China

Abstract

AbstractThe effective and efficient monitoring of revegetation outcomes is a key component of ecosystem restoration. Monitoring often involves labor‐intensive manual methods, which are difficult to deploy when sites are inaccessible or involve large areas of revegetation. This study aimed to identify plant species and quantify α‐diversity index on a sub‐meter scale at Manlailiang Mine Site in Northwestern China using unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) as a means to semiautomate large‐scale vegetation monitoring. UAVs equipped with multispectral sensors were combined with three industry‐standard supervised classification algorithms (support vector machine [SVM], maximum likelihood, and artificial neural network) to classify plant species. Spectral vegetation indices (normalized difference vegetation index [NDVI], difference vegetation index [DVI], visible‐band difference vegetation index, soil‐adjusted vegetation index, modified soil‐adjusted vegetation index, and excess green–excess red) were used to assess vegetation diversity obtained from on‐ground survey plot data (the Margalef, Pielou, Simpson, and Shannon–Wiener indices). Our results showed that SVM outperformed other algorithms in species identification accuracy (overall accuracy of 84%). Significant relationships were observed between vegetation indices and diversity indices, with the DVI performing significantly better than many more commonly used indices such as the NDVI. The findings highlight the potential of combining UAV multispectral data, spectral vegetation indices and ground surveys for effective and efficient fine‐scale monitoring of vegetation diversity in the ecological restoration of mining areas. This has significant practical benefits for improving adaptive management of restoration through improved monitoring tools.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

National Social Science Fund of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Soil Science,General Environmental Science,Development,Environmental Chemistry

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