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 crop type map


Combining Deep Learning and Street View Imagery to Map Smallholder Crop Types

Soler, Jordi Laguarta, Friedel, Thomas, Wang, Sherrie

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Accurate crop type maps are an essential source of information for monitoring yield progress at scale, projecting global crop production, and planning effective policies. To date, however, crop type maps remain challenging to create in low and middle-income countries due to a lack of ground truth labels for training machine learning models. Field surveys are the gold standard in terms of accuracy but require an often-prohibitively large amount of time, money, and statistical capacity. In recent years, street-level imagery, such as Google Street View, KartaView, and Mapillary, has become available around the world. Such imagery contains rich information about crop types grown at particular locations and times. In this work, we develop an automated system to generate crop type ground references using deep learning and Google Street View imagery. The method efficiently curates a set of street view images containing crop fields, trains a model to predict crop type by utilizing weakly-labelled images from disparate out-of-domain sources, and combines predicted labels with remote sensing time series to create a wall-to-wall crop type map. We show that, in Thailand, the resulting country-wide map of rice, cassava, maize, and sugarcane achieves an accuracy of 93%. We publicly release the first-ever crop type map for all of Thailand 2022 at 10m-resolution with no gaps. To our knowledge, this is the first time a 10m-resolution, multi-crop map has been created for any smallholder country. As the availability of roadside imagery expands, our pipeline provides a way to map crop types at scale around the globe, especially in underserved smallholder regions.


Crop mapping in the small sample/no sample case: an approach using a two-level cascade classifier and integrating domain knowledge

Zang, Yunze, Liu, Yifei, Chen, Xuehong, Li, Anqi, Zhai, Yichen, Li, Shijie, Liu, Luling, Zhu, Chuanhai, Chen, Ruilin, Li, Shupeng, Jie, Na

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Mapping crops using remote sensing technology is important for food security and land management. Machine learning-based methods has become a popular approach for crop mapping in recent years. However, the key to machine learning, acquiring ample and accurate samples, is usually time-consuming and laborious. To solve this problem, a crop mapping method in the small sample/no sample case that integrating domain knowledge and using a cascaded classification framework that combine a weak classifier learned from samples with strong features and a strong classifier trained by samples with weak feature was proposed. First, based on the domain knowledge of various crops, a low-capacity classifier such as decision tree was applied to acquire those pixels with distinctive features and complete observation sequences as "strong feature" samples. Then, to improve the representativeness of these samples, sample augmentation strategy that artificially remove the observations of "strong feature" samples according to the average valid observation proportion in target area was applied. Finally, based on the original samples and augmented samples, a large-capacity classifier such as random forest was trained for crop mapping. The method achieved an overall accuracy of 82% in the MAP crop recognition competition held by Syngenta Group, China in 2021 (third prize, ranked fourth). This method integrates domain knowledge to overcome the difficulties of sample acquisition, providing a convenient, fast and accurate solution for crop mapping.


Annual field-scale maps of tall and short crops at the global scale using GEDI and Sentinel-2

Di Tommaso, Stefania, Wang, Sherrie, Vajipey, Vivek, Gorelick, Noel, Strey, Rob, Lobell, David B.

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Crop type maps are critical for tracking agricultural land use and estimating crop production. Remote sensing has proven an efficient and reliable tool for creating these maps in regions with abundant ground labels for model training, yet these labels remain difficult to obtain in many regions and years. NASA's Global Ecosystem Dynamics Investigation (GEDI) spaceborne lidar instrument, originally designed for forest monitoring, has shown promise for distinguishing tall and short crops. In the current study, we leverage GEDI to develop wall-to-wall maps of short vs tall crops on a global scale at 10 m resolution for 2019-2021. Specifically, we show that (1) GEDI returns can reliably be classified into tall and short crops after removing shots with extreme view angles or topographic slope, (2) the frequency of tall crops over time can be used to identify months when tall crops are at their peak height, and (3) GEDI shots in these months can then be used to train random forest models that use Sentinel-2 time series to accurately predict short vs. tall crops. Independent reference data from around the world are then used to evaluate these GEDI-S2 maps. We find that GEDI-S2 performed nearly as well as models trained on thousands of local reference training points, with accuracies of at least 87% and often above 90% throughout the Americas, Europe, and East Asia. Systematic underestimation of tall crop area was observed in regions where crops frequently exhibit low biomass, namely Africa and South Asia, and further work is needed in these systems. Although the GEDI-S2 approach only differentiates tall from short crops, in many landscapes this distinction goes a long way toward mapping the main individual crop types. The combination of GEDI and Sentinel-2 thus presents a very promising path towards global crop mapping with minimal reliance on ground data.