
doi: 10.5589/m02-095
Satellite remote sensing is increasingly used to map and monitor coral reefs. From 1984 to the present, Landsat-5 thematic mapper (TM) and Landsat-7 enhanced thematic mapper plus (ETM+) images provide the longest time series available for change detection analysis over coral reefs. A time series of four Landsat-5 images and one Landsat-7 image spanning 1984–2000 was analyzed to detect changes in "coral-dominated", "sand", "algae", and "substrate" benthic classes for Carysfort Reef in the Florida Keys. To properly analyze this time series, a set of corrections was undertaken, which included noise-reduction correction, atmospheric correction, and TM–ETM+ data normalization. All images were classified with a Mahalanobis distance classifier using statistics from the 1984 image to identify the four benthic classes. The results were compared with historical ground-truthing data, a combination of high-resolution aerial photography and Ikonos satellite data, and results from a temporal texture change detection an...
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