Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10117159 | South African Journal of Botany | 2005 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
Landsat 7 ETMÂ + imagery from November 1999 was used to map the remaining fragments of West Coast Renosterveld, arguably the most transformed vegetation type in South Africa. A combination of supervised and unsupervised classifications was used. These showed that Renosterveld was not definitively discernible using spectral techniques. Our final map suggested that 7.9% remained, mainly untransformed, within a region defined by combining the boundaries suggested by previous researchers (Cowling and Heijnis 2001, Low and Rebelo 1996). Using a predictive envelope based upon geological, pedological, altitudinal and rainfall data we estimated that 9.4% of the original extent of Renosterveld remained within the west coast lowlands. We examined boundary effects along the base of the Western Fold Mountains, and showed how soil mixing and coarse-scale maps had the potential to result in an 18.4% overestimate of the amount of spectrally-identified West Coast Renosterveld remaining.
Related Topics
Life Sciences
Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Agronomy and Crop Science
Authors
I.P. Newton, R.S. Knight, R.M. Cowling,