Accuracy assessment of the National Forest Inventory map of Mexico: sampling designs and the fuzzy characterization of landscapes

Stéphane Couturier, Álvaro Vega Guzmán, Jean François Mas, Valdemar Tapia, Erna López Granados
2009 Investigaciones Geográficas  
There is no record so far in the literature of a comprehensive method to assess the accuracy of regional scale Land Cover/ Land Use (LCLU) maps in the sub-tropical belt. The elevated biodiversity and the presence of highly fragmented classes hamper the use of sampling designs commonly employed in previous assessments of mainly temperate zones. A sampling design for assessing the accuracy of the Mexican National Forest Inventory (NFI) map at community level is presented. A pilot study was
more » ... ed on the Cuitzeo Lake watershed region covering 400 000 ha of the 2000 Landsat-derived map. Various sampling designs were tested in order to find a trade-off between operational costs, a good spatial distribution of the sample and the inclusion of all scarcely distributed classes ('rare classes'). A two-stage sampling design where the selection of Primary Sampling Units (PSU) was done under separate schemes for commonly and scarcely distributed classes, showed best characteristics. A total of 2 023 punctual secondary sampling units were verified against their NFI map label. Issues regarding the assessment strategy and trends of class confusions are devised.
doi:10.14350/rig.17988 doaj:32238f20ca494d1b8562a7baa9eb8531 fatcat:qlibk4kwwnai5g7q6bhnwybf5u