利用卫星图像估计野生大型动物的数量:以赞比亚卢安瓜河河马为例

J. Irvine, J. Nolan, Nathaniel Hofmann, D. Lewis, Twakundine Simpamba, P. Zyambo, A. Travis, S. Hemami
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摘要

受人类活动增加和气候变化影响,自然生态系统的退化正威胁着许多野生动物种群。赞比亚卢安瓜河谷的河马种群就是一个例子,由于农业压力增加,森林覆盖率下降,这可能会限制河马的范围和数量,因为这减少了河马的关键栖息地卢安瓜河的水流。COMACO通过以农民为基础的商业模式实施经济激励措施,以减轻流域损失的威胁,并将河马确定为评估其工作和卢安瓜流域健康的关键指标物种。这项工作的目标是开发自动化机器学习工具,可以处理高分辨率商业卫星图像,以估计河马种群和栖息地的相关特征。重点是赞比亚的卢安瓜河,那里的理想图像采集时间是6月至9月的旱季。本研究利用历史商业卫星图像来识别可观察到河马群体的选定区域,开发基于图像的河马检测签名,并构建初始图像分类器,以支持对广大地区河马种群的大规模评估。我们首先描述问题的性质以及应用遥感方法估计动物种群所固有的挑战。为了应对这些挑战,通过分析历史图像构建了光谱特征。最初的分类器开发方法依赖于光谱角度来区分河马和背景,背景条件包括水、裸露的土壤、低植被、树木和这些物质的混合物。我们给出了该方法和初始分类器结果。最后,我们讨论了下一步如何产生基于图像的河马种群估计,并讨论了从本研究中吸取的教训。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Estimating the Population of Large Animals in the Wild Using Satellite Imagery: A Case Study of Hippos in Zambia’s Luangwa River
Degradation of natural ecosystems as influenced by increasing human activity and climate change is threatening many animal populations in the wild. Zambia’s hippo population in Luangwa Valley is one example where declining forest cover from increased farming pressures has the potential of limiting hippo range and numbers by reducing water flow in this population’s critical habitat, the Luangwa River. COMACO applies economic incentives through a farmer-based business model to mitigate threats of watershed loss and has identified hippos as a key indicator species for assessing its work and the health of Luangwa’s watershed. The goal of this effort is to develop automated machine learning tools that can process fine resolution commercial satellite imagery to estimate the hippo population and associated characteristics of the habitat. The focus is the Luangwa River in Zambia, where the ideal time for imagery acquisition is the dry season of June through September. This study leverages historical commercial satellite imagery to identify selected areas with observable hippo groupings, develop an-image-based signature for hippo detection, and construct an initial image classifier to support larger-scale assessment of the hippo population over broad regions. We begin by characterizing the nature of the problem and the challenges inherent in applying remote sensing methods to the estimation of animal populations. To address these challenges, spectral signatures were constructed from analysis of historical imagery. The initial approach to classifier development relied on spectral angle to distinguish hippos from background, where background conditions included water, bare soil, low vegetation, trees, and mixtures of these materials. We present the approach and the initial classifier results. We conclude with a discussion of next steps to produce an imagebased estimate of the hippo populations and discuss lessons learned from this study.
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