Classification of time series of NDVI for Assessment of land cover change in Ghana using Noaa/A VHRR data.
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Date
April, 2010.
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Abstract
Land  cover  information  constitutes  key  environmental  information  for  many  scientific, 
resource management and policy purposes, as well as for a range of human activities. Hence it 
has become a major focus for the International Geosphere-Biosphere Program (IGBP) and the 
International Human Dimensions Program (IHDP) at global and regional levels. Land cover 
information is currently scarce for Ghana. The country is currently undergoing  rapid  and 
wide-range  changes  in  vegetation  due  to  climate  change,  the practice  of  slash-and-burn 
or  shifting  cultivation.  The stud y of these   conversions necessitates the use of remote 
sensing because it provides data at synoptic scales and facilitates the discerning of large-
scale ecosystem patterns. Although remote sensing technology has been used for mapping in 
Ghana for sometime now, there has been no attempt to use either unsupervised  or supervised 
classification methods for NOAA/AVHRR images for the whole of Ghana. Therefore a 
qualitative approach to the use of historical series of low resolution NDVI data to produce land 
cover maps of Ghana and   also   to   evaluate   the   relative   change   in   land   cover   from 
1982 to 2002 has been developed. The study was carried out through the principal 
component analysis and classification of long term average NDVI values. The interpretation of 
the resulting classes was based on the comparison between NDVI average temporal profiles of 
different  classes  and  NDVI reference   profiles   for   selected   sites   where   detailed 
information  about   vegetation characteristics are available. The results show the potential of 
the proposed approach for studies at regional or national level where lack of climate data 
hinder the utilization of quantitative methods to determine the land cover change within the 
periods (1982-1992, 1992-2002 and 1982-2002). Again the results of the study shows that the 
dominant land coverchange process was conversion of natural vegetation to savannah and 
shrub thicket, which occurred at an annual rate of 4% and 6.5% respectively. Most of the 
land cover change process occurred in the first period (1982-1992). 
The  overall  annual  rate  of change in  land cover	(1982-1992)  was  highest  for Savannah
(3.8%) and lowest for water (1.03%).
The results suggest that, year phenological behavior, as revealed by the NDVI data, can be 
used to map general patterns in the spatial distribution of Ghana‟s main vegetation formation.
Description
A these submitted to the Department of Geomantic Engineering, 
Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Science.