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LANDFIRE Annual Disturbance AK 2021
LANDFIRE's (LF) Annual Disturbance products provide temporal and spatial information related to landscape change. Annual Disturbance depicts areas of 4.5 hectares (11 acres) or larger that have experienced a natural or anthropogenic landscape change (or treatment) within a given year. For the creation of the Annual Disturbance product, information sources include national fire mapping programs such as Monitoring Trends in Burn Severity (MTBS), Burned Area Reflectance Classification (BARC) and Rapid Assessment of Vegetation Condition after Wildfire (RAVG), 18 types of agency-contributed "event" perimeters (see LF Public Events Geodatabase), and remotely sensed Landsat imagery. To create the LF Annual Disturbance products, individual Landsat scenes are stacked and made into composites representing the 50th percentile of all stacked pixels (band-by-band) to reduce data gaps caused by clouds or other anomalies. Composite imagery from the specified mapping year, the two prior years, and the following year serve as the base data from which change products such as the Normalized Differenced Vegetation Index (dNDVI), the Normalized Burn Ratio (dNBR), and the Multi-Index Integrated Change Algorithm (MIICA) (Jin et al. 2013) are derived. Image analysts collectively use these datasets (separately or in combination) to isolate the true change from false change (commission errors). False changes can be attributed to many anomalies but are mostly caused by differences in annual or seasonal phenology, and/or artifacts in the image composites. Fire-caused disturbances sourced from MTBS may contain data gaps where clouds obscure the full burn scar from being mapped. Models trained from pre-fire and post-fire Landsat data are used to fill these gaps. The result is gap-free continuous severity and extent information for all MTBS fire disturbances. MTBS pixels derived from gap filling techniques, such as modeling, are noted as such in the Annual Disturbance attribute table. Smaller fires that do not meet the size criteria set forth by MTBS may be attributed using Burned Area (BA), informed from Landsat Level-3 science products and only available in the lower 48 states. Causality and severity information assigned to a disturbance are prioritized by source, with the highest priorities reserved for fire mapping programs (MTBS, BARC, and RAVG) followed by user-contributed events contained in the LF Events Geodatabase, and lastly, Landsat image-based change.
Author(s) |
Brian L Tolk |
Publication Date | 2023-12-28 |
Beginning Date of Data | 2022 |
Ending Date of Data | 2022 |
Data Contact | |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.5066/P974JF8W |
Citation | Tolk, B.L., La, I.P., Dockter, D.J., Martin, C.M., Bourget, P.F., Beverly, S.D., Soluk, E.L., (CTR), D.L., Propios, S.C., Porter, L.J., Degaga, E.J., (CTR), T.S., and Casey, J.G., 2023, LANDFIRE Annual Disturbance AK 2021: U.S. Geological Survey data release, https://doi.org/10.5066/P974JF8W. |
Metadata Contact | |
Metadata Date | 2024-04-09 |
Related Publication | There was no related primary publication associated with this data release. |
Citations of these data | No citations of these data are known at this time. |
Access | public |
License | http://www.usa.gov/publicdomain/label/1.0/ |
Harvest Date: 2024-07-18T13:40:47.875Z