The International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences
Download
Publications Copernicus
Download
Citation
Articles | Volume XLII-3
https://doi.org/10.5194/isprs-archives-XLII-3-1041-2018
https://doi.org/10.5194/isprs-archives-XLII-3-1041-2018
30 Apr 2018
 | 30 Apr 2018

THE RESEARCH ON DRYLAND CROP CLASSIFICATION BASED ON THE FUSION OF SENTINEL-1A SAR AND OPTICAL IMAGES

F. Liu, T. Chen, J. He, Q. Wen, F. Yu, X. Gu, and Z. Wang

Keywords: Crop Classification, Fusion, Sentinel-1A, Synthetic Aperture Radar, Object-Oriented Technique

Abstract. In recent years, the quick upgrading and improvement of SAR sensors provide beneficial complements for the traditional optical remote sensing in the aspects of theory, technology and data. In this paper, Sentinel-1A SAR data and GF-1 optical data were selected for image fusion, and more emphases were put on the dryland crop classification under a complex crop planting structure, regarding corn and cotton as the research objects. Considering the differences among various data fusion methods, the principal component analysis (PCA), Gram-Schmidt (GS), Brovey and wavelet transform (WT) methods were compared with each other, and the GS and Brovey methods were proved to be more applicable in the study area. Then, the classification was conducted based on the object-oriented technique process. And for the GS, Brovey fusion images and GF-1 optical image, the nearest neighbour algorithm was adopted to realize the supervised classification with the same training samples. Based on the sample plots in the study area, the accuracy assessment was conducted subsequently. The values of overall accuracy and kappa coefficient of fusion images were all higher than those of GF-1 optical image, and GS method performed better than Brovey method. In particular, the overall accuracy of GS fusion image was 79.8 %, and the Kappa coefficient was 0.644. Thus, the results showed that GS and Brovey fusion images were superior to optical images for dryland crop classification. This study suggests that the fusion of SAR and optical images is reliable for dryland crop classification under a complex crop planting structure.