Remote sensing annual dynamics of rapid permafrost thaw disturbances with LandTrendr
[Display omitted] •Combination of Landsat and Sentinel-2 imagery in LandTrendr.•Adaptation of LandTrendr to rapid permafrost disturbances.•Detection of retrogressive thaw slumps across a 8.1×106km2 region in North Siberia.•Annually affected area of retrogressive thaw slumps increases 2000–2019. Perm...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Remote sensing of environment 2022-01, Vol.268, p.112752, Article 112752 |
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•Combination of Landsat and Sentinel-2 imagery in LandTrendr.•Adaptation of LandTrendr to rapid permafrost disturbances.•Detection of retrogressive thaw slumps across a 8.1×106km2 region in North Siberia.•Annually affected area of retrogressive thaw slumps increases 2000–2019.
Permafrost is warming globally which leads to widespread permafrost thaw. Particularly ice-rich permafrost is vulnerable to rapid thaw and erosion, impacting whole landscapes and ecosystems. Retrogressive thaw slumps (RTS) are abrupt permafrost disturbances that expand by several meters each year and lead to an increased soil organic carbon release. Local Remote Sensing studies identified increasing RTS activity in the last two decades by increasing number of RTS or heightened RTS growth rates. However, a large-scale assessment across diverse permafrost regions and at high temporal resolution allowing to further determine RTS thaw dynamics and its main drivers is still lacking.
In this study we apply the disturbance detection algorithm LandTrendr for automated large-scale RTS mapping and high temporal thaw dynamic assessment to North Siberia (8.1×106km2). We adapted and parametrised the temporal segmentation algorithm for abrupt disturbance detection to incorporate Landsat+Sentinel-2 mosaics, conducted spectral filtering, spatial masking and filtering, and a binary machine-learning object classification of the disturbance output to separate between RTS and false positives (F1 score: 0.609). Ground truth data for calibration and validation of the workflow was collected from 9 known RTS cluster sites using very high-resolution RapidEye and PlanetScope imagery.
Our study presents the first automated detection and assessment of RTS and their temporal dynamics at large-scale for 2001–2019. We identified 50,895 RTS and a steady increase in RTS-affected area from 2001 to 2019 across North Siberia, with a more abrupt increase from 2016 onward. Overall the RTS-affected area increased by 331% compared to 2000 (2000: 20,158ha, 2001–2019: 66,699ha). Contrary to this, 5 focus sites show spatio-temporal variability in their annual RTS dynamics, with alternating periods of increased and decreased RTS development, indicating a close relationship to thaw drivers. The majority of identified RTS was active from 2000 onward and only a small proportion initiated during the assessment period, indicating that the increase in RTS-affected area was mainly caused by enlarging existing RTS an |
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ISSN: | 0034-4257 1879-0704 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.rse.2021.112752 |