Mapping impervious surface area in the Brazilian Amazon using Landsat Imagery

GIsci Remote Sens. 2013;50(2):172-183. doi: 10.1080/15481603.2013.780452.

Abstract

Impervious surface area (ISA) is an important parameter related to environmental change and socioeconomic conditions, and has been given increasing attention in the past two decades. However, mapping ISA using remote sensing data is still a challenge due to the variety and complexity of materials comprising ISA and the limitations of remote sensing data spectral and spatial resolution. This paper examines ISA mapping with Landsat Thematic Mapper (TM) images in urban and urban-rural landscapes in the Brazilian Amazon. A fractional-based method and a per-pixel based method were used to map ISA distribution, and their results were evaluated with QuickBird images based on the 2010 Brazilian census at the sector scale of analysis for examining the mapping performance. This research showed that the fraction-based method improved the ISA estimation, especially in urban-rural frontiers and in a landscape with a small urban extent. Large errors were mainly located at the sites having ISA proportions of 0.2-0.4 in a census sector. Calibration with high spatial resolution data is valuable for improving Landsat-based ISA estimates.

Keywords: Landsat; impervious surface area; spectral mixture analysis; urban–rural landscape.