Litcius/Paper detail

Mapping the world's coral reefs using a global multiscale earth observation framework

Mitchell Lyons, Chris Roelfsema, Emma Kennedy, Éva Kovács, Rodney Borrego‐Acevedo, Kathryn Markey, Meredith Roe, Doddy Yuwono, Daniel Harris, Stuart Phinn, Gregory P. Asner, Jiwei Li, David Knapp, Nicholas S. Fabina, Kirk Larsen, Dimosthenis Traganos, Nicholas Murray

2020Remote Sensing in Ecology and Conservation149 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Coral reefs are among the most diverse and iconic ecosystems on Earth, but a range of anthropogenic pressures are threatening their persistence. Owing to their remoteness, broad spatial coverage and cross‐jurisdictional locations, there are no high‐resolution remotely sensed maps available at the global scale. Here we present a framework that is capable of mapping coral reef habitats from individual reefs (~200 km 2 ) to entire barrier reef systems (200 000 km 2 ) and across vast ocean extents (>6 000 000 km 2 ). This is the first time this has been demonstrated using a consistent and transparent remote sensing mapping framework. The ten maps that we present achieved good accuracy (78% mean overall accuracy) from multiple input image datasets and training data sources, and our framework was shown to be adaptable to either benthic or geomorphic reef features and across diverse coral reef environments. These new generation high‐resolution map data will be useful for supporting ecosystem risk assessments, detecting change in ecosystem dynamics and targeting efforts to monitor local‐scale changes in coral cover and reef health.

Topics & Concepts

Coral reefReefCoralRemote sensingCoral reef organizationsBenthic zoneRange (aeronautics)Resilience of coral reefsEnvironmental scienceEcosystemAtollOceanographyGeographyEnvironmental resource managementGeologyCoral reef protectionEcologyMaterials scienceBiologyComposite materialCoral and Marine Ecosystems StudiesRemote-Sensing Image ClassificationFlood Risk Assessment and Management