1. Evaluating Threatened Bird Occurrence in the Tropics by Using L-Band SAR Remote Sensing Data.
- Author
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Kobayashi, Shoko, Fujita, Motoko S., Omura, Yoshiharu, Haryadi, Dendy S., Muhammad, Ahmad, Irham, Mohammad, and Shiodera, Satomi
- Subjects
RARE birds ,REMOTE sensing ,MICROWAVE remote sensing ,BIRD diversity ,SYNTHETIC aperture radar ,FOREST biodiversity - Abstract
The biodiversity loss in Southeast Asia indicates an urgent need for long-term monitoring, which is lacking. Much attention is being directed toward bird diversity monitoring using remote sensing, based on relation to forest structure. However, few studies have utilized space-borne active microwave remote sensing, which has considerable advantages in terms of repetitive observations over tropical areas. Here, we evaluate threatened bird occurrence from L-band satellite data explaining forest structure in Sumatra, Indonesia. First, we identified L-band parameters with strong correlations with the forest layer structure, defined as forest floor, understory, and canopy layers. Then, we analyzed the correlation between threatened bird occurrence and L-band parameters identified as explaining forest structure. The results reveal that several parameters can represent the layers of forest floor, understory, and canopy. Subsequent statistical analysis elucidated that forest-dependent and threatened bird species exhibit significant positive correlations with the selected L-band parameters explaining forest floor and understory. Our results highlight the potential of applying microwave satellite remote sensing to evaluate bird diversity through forest structure estimation, although a more comprehensive study is needed to strengthen our findings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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