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      Influence of high-resolution data on the assessment of forest fragmentation

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          Abstract

          Context

          Remote sensing has been a foundation of landscape ecology. The spatial resolution (pixel size) of remotely sensed land cover products has improved since the introduction of landscape ecology in the United States. Because patterns depend on spatial resolution, emerging improvements in the spatial resolution of land cover may lead to new insights about the scaling of landscape patterns.

          Objective

          We compared forest fragmentation measures derived from very high resolution (1 m 2) data with the same measures derived from the commonly used (30 m × −30 m; 900 m 2) Landsat-based data.

          Methods

          We applied area-density scaling to binary (forest; non-forest) maps for both sources to derive source-specific estimates of dominant (density ≥ 60%), interior (≥ 90%), and intact (100%) forest.

          Results

          Switching from low- to high-resolution data produced statistical and geographic shifts in forest spatial patterns. Forest and non-forest features that were “invisible” at low resolution but identifiable at high resolution resulted in higher estimates of dominant and interior forest but lower estimates of intact forest from the high-resolution source. Overall, the high-resolution data detected more forest that was more contagiously distributed even at larger spatial scales.

          Conclusion

          We anticipate that improvements in the spatial resolution of remotely sensed land cover products will advance landscape ecology through reinterpretations of patterns and scaling, by fostering new landscape pattern measurements, and by testing new spatial pattern-ecological process hypotheses.

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          Most cited references57

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          Development of a global land cover characteristics database and IGBP DISCover from 1 km AVHRR data

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            Landscape Ecology: The Effect of Pattern on Process

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              Development of a 2001 National Land-Cover Database for the United States

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                101534628
                38473
                Landsc Ecol
                Landsc Ecol
                Landscape ecology
                0921-2973
                9 January 2020
                1 September 2019
                01 September 2020
                : 34
                : 2169-2182
                Affiliations
                National Exposure Research Laboratory, Office of Research Development, U.S. Environmental Protection, Agency, 109 T.W. Alexander Dr.; MD: 343-05, Research Triangle Park, NC 27711, USA
                Southern Research Station, United States Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Research Triangle Park, NC 27709, USA
                Author notes
                Author information
                http://orcid.org/0000-0002-7409-7365
                Article
                EPAPA1547632
                10.1007/s10980-019-00820-z
                7029708
                32076363
                08f1a430-9814-4de8-8c20-d8fbc093db4c

                Open Access This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made.

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                chesapeake bay land cover,forest spatial patterns,nlcd,spatial resolution remote sensing

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