The use of sentinel-2 imagery to generate vegetations maps for the Northern Antarctic peninsula and offshore islands

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Abstract

We used Sentinel-2 imagery time series to generate a vegetation map for the Northern part of the Antarctica Peninsula and offshore islands, including the South Shetlands. The vegetation cover was identified in the NDVI maximum value composite image. The NDVI values were associated with the occurrence of algae (0.15 - 0.20), lichens (0.20 - 0.50), and mosses (0.50 - 0.80). The vegetation cover distribution map was validated using the literature information. Generating a vegetation map distribution on an annual basis was not possible due to high cloud cover in the Antarctic region, especially in coastal áreas, so optical images from 2016 to 2021 were necessary to map the vegetation distribution in the entire study área. The final map analyzed in association with the weather data shows the occurrence of a microenvironment over the western islands of the Antarctic Peninsula that provided vegetation growth conditions. The Sentinel-2 images with 10m spatial resolution allow the assembly of accurate vegetation distribution maps for the Antarctica Peninsula and Islands, the Google Earth Engine cloud computing being essential to process a large amount of the satellite images necessary for processing these maps.

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APA

Fonseca, E. L. D., Santos, E. C. D., Figueiredo, A. R. D., & Simões, J. C. (2023). The use of sentinel-2 imagery to generate vegetations maps for the Northern Antarctic peninsula and offshore islands. Anais Da Academia Brasileira de Ciencias, 95, e20230710. https://doi.org/10.1590/0001-3765202320230710

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