《A comparison of global and regional open datasets for urban greenspace mapping》

打印
作者
Yiming Liao;Qi Zhou;Xuanqiao Jing
来源
URBAN FORESTRY & URBAN GREENING,Vol.62,Issue1,Article 127132
语言
英文
关键字
FROM-GLC10;Land-use;Land-cover;OpenStreetMap;Park;Urban atlas;Vegetation
作者单位
School of Geography and Information Engineering, China University of Geosciences, Wuhan, PR China;School of Geography and Information Engineering, China University of Geosciences, Wuhan, PR China
摘要
Greenspace has positive influences on urban environment and human health, and thus it is desirable to acquire data for (urban) greenspace mapping. Nowadays, global and regional open land-use/land-cover datasets have become essential sources for greenspace mapping, but few studies have quantitatively compared them. To fill this gap, this study carries out a quantitative comparison of six global and regional open datasets (CGLS-LC100, CLC, GLC30, UA, FROM-GLC10 and OSM) for greenspace mapping. First of all, the most appropriate land-use/land-cover classes selected as greenspace are analyzed for each open dataset; then, different open datasets are evaluated and compared in terms of five measures (accuracy, precision, recall, F1-score and green coverage rate). Five urban areas in UK are chosen as study areas. Two categories of reference datasets are used for evaluation, including an Ordnance Survey (OS) greenspace dataset in UK and a number of sampling points classified by referring to Google Earth. Results show that: the OSM dataset performs the best, while comparing with the OS dataset (characterized by a narrowly interpreted greenspace); and the FROM-GLC10 dataset performs the best, while comparing with the sampling points (characterized by a broadly interpreted greenspace). Moreover, by using these two open datasets, most quantitative results are close to or higher than 80 %, in terms of the accuracy, precision, recall and F1-score; in most cases there also is the smallest difference between using these two open datasets and corresponding reference datasets, in terms of the green coverage rate. These findings have benefits for researchers and planners to choose an appropriate open dataset for greenspace mapping.