A Light-Weight Cropland Mapping Model Using Satellite Imagery

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Abstract

Many applications in agriculture as well as other related fields including natural resources, environment, health, and sustainability, depend on recent and reliable cropland maps. Cropland extent and intensity plays a critical input variable for the study of crop production and food security around the world. However, generating such variables manually is difficult, expensive, and time consuming. In this work, we discuss a cost effective, fast, and simple machine-learning-based approach to provide reliable cropland mapping model using satellite imagery. The study includes four test regions, namely Iran, Mozambique, Sri-Lanka, and Sudan, where Sentinel-2 satellite imagery were obtained with assigned NDVI scores. The solution presented in this paper discusses a complete pipeline including data collection, time series reconstruction, and cropland extent and crop intensity mapping using machine learning models. The approach proposed managed to achieve high accuracy results ranging between 0.92 and 0.98 across the four test regions at hand.

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Hussain, M. H., Abuhani, D. A., Khan, J., ElMohandes, M., Zualkernan, I., & Ali, T. (2023). A Light-Weight Cropland Mapping Model Using Satellite Imagery. Sensors, 23(15). https://doi.org/10.3390/s23156729

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