Abstract
Absfrucf-Digital procedures to optimize the information content of multitemporal Landsat TM data sets for forest cover change detection are described. Imagery from three different years (1984,1986, and 1990) were calibrated to exoatmospheric reflectance to minimize sensor calibration offsets and standard- ize data acquisition aspects. Geometric rectification was fol- lowed by atmospheric normalization and correction routines. The normalization consisted of a statistical regression over time based on spatially well-defined and spectrally stable landscape features spanning the entire reflectance range. Linear corre- lation coefficients for all bitemporal band pairs ranged from 0.9884 to 0.9998. The correction mechanism used a dark object subtraction technique incorporating published values of water reflectance. The association between digital data and forest cover was maximized and interpretability enhanced by con- verting band-specific reflectance values into vegetation indexes. Bitemporal vegetation index pairs for each time interval (two, four, and six years) were subjected to two change detection al- gorithms, standardized differencing and selective principal component analysis. Optimal feature selection was based on statistical divergence measures. Although limited to spectrally- radiometrically defined change classes, results show that the relationship between reflective TM data and forest canopy change is explicit enough to be of operational use in a forest cover change stratification phase prior to a more detailed as- sessment.