RT info:eu-repo/semantics/article T1 Comparison of pixel unmixing models in the evaluation of post-fire forest resilience based on temporal series of satellite imagery at moderate and very high spatial resolution A1 Fernández Guisuraga, José Manuel A1 Calvo Galván, María Leonor A1 Suárez Seoane, Susana A2 Ecologia K1 Ecología. Medio ambiente K1 Dimidiate pixel model K1 Fire regime K1 Fractional vegetation cover K1 Landsat K1 MESMA K1 WorldView-2 AB In Mediterranean fire-prone ecosystems, shifts in fire regime as a consequence of global change could modify the resilience of vegetation communities. In this paper, we aim to compare the efficiency of high and moderate spatial resolution satellite imagery in the evaluation of resilience in a fire-prone landscape under different fire regime categories using two pixel unmixing techniques. A time series of Landsat (ETM+ and OLI; spatial resolution of 30 m) and WorldView-2 (spatial resolution of 2 m) imagery collected between 2011 (pre-fire conditions) and 2016 were used to estimate the temporal variation of fractional vegetation cover (FVC) as a quantitative measure of forest resilience. For this time series, FVC was computed under four fire-regime categories of recurrence and severity using two approaches: dimidiate pixel model and multiple endmember spectral mixture analysis (MESMA). The dimidiate pixel model was computed using NDVI as spectral response for the case of Landsat imagery and NDVI and red-edge NDVI (RENDVI) for WorldView-2. MESMA was applied to unmix WorldView-2 and Landsat imagery into four fraction images: photosynthetic vegetation (PV), non-photosynthetic vegetation (NPV), soil and shade. The PV shade normalized fraction corresponds to the FVC. In summer of 2016 we established 85 30 × 30 m field plots and 360 2 × 2 m field plots to measure the percentage of total vegetation cover in order to validate the FVC estimates made from remote sensing data. The FVC time series showed the same general pattern with both spatial scales and modeling approaches, high fire recurrence categories registering the highest resilience. The accuracy of the dimidiate pixel model was significantly higher for WorldView-2 based estimates (RMSE: 5–10%) than for Landsat (RMSE: 10–15%). The dimidiate pixel model computed from NDVI for both Landsat and WorldView-2 underestimated FVC at high field-sampled vegetation cover, while MESMA estimations were accurate for the entire range of vegetation cover for both satellites. The fraction of photosynthetic vegetation calculated using WorldView-2 had a higher performance (RMSE: 4–6%) than that quantified from Landsat (RMSE: 6–8%). The linear relationships assumed for validation purposes were statistically significant for both sensors and modeling approaches. Our study demonstrates the highest performance of very high spatial resolution satellite imagery and MESMA models in the quantitative estimation of FVC as a measure of post-fire resilience. PB Elsevier SN 0924-2716 LK http://hdl.handle.net/10612/12164 UL http://hdl.handle.net/10612/12164 NO P. 217-228 DS BULERIA. Repositorio Institucional de la Universidad de León RD 20-abr-2024