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Learning spectral-spatial representations from VHR images for fine-scale crop type mapping: A case study of rice-crayfish field extraction in South China
发布人:MARI发布时间:2023-04-11

Accurate information on crop type spatial distributions is crucial for yield estimation, agroecological modeling, and agrarian policy development. In comparison with moderate resolution (10–30 m) satellite images, very high-resolution (VHR, ≤ 1 m) images are superior at describing the spatial details and complex texture features of agricultural land. However, VHR images generally suffer from insufficient spatiotemporal coverage and high spectral variation in crop type, making fine-scale crop type mapping at regional or larger scales challenging. In this study, we developed a novel data-driven residual attention U-shape network (RAUNet) to identify crop types at the regional scale based on VHR images. RAUNet was adapted from UNet by introducing a residual module and a gated attention mechanism to strengthen the multilevel representation of crop features from VHR images. We selected rice-crayfish fields (RCFs) in Hubei Province, China, as the case crop type and area to test the performance of RAUNet. Seven models, including RAUNetpan, ResUNet, AttnUNet, UNet, DeepLabV3 + and random forest at the pixel and object levels, were adopted for comparison with RAUNet. Moreover, the model transferability was evaluated over regions with different agricultural landscapes. Our results showed that RAUNet-derived RCF maps obtained an average F1-score and MCC of 0.90 and 0.85 at different cultivation stages, which significantly outperformed other methods. Additionally, RAUNet had good spatiotemporal transferability, with an average F1-score and MCC of 0.93 and 0.88 in four transfer areas. The visualization results of the attention weights indicated RAUNet’s prominent capability in combining useful and relevant information from different feature levels to produce refinement predictions for the target crop type. Furthermore, the high-level features derived from RAUNet can well separate RCFs and non-RCFs over different landscapes, which were also consistent across different cultivation periods. These encouraging results suggest that RAUNet works well for fine-scale crop type mapping in smallholder farming systems, and it is an efficient method for land cover mapping based on VHR images at the regional scale.


https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0924271623000795?via%3Dihub