Accounting for alternation in temporal quality analysis in MapBiomas Brazil
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Resumo
Land use and land cover maps are an important resource for
understanding interactions between humans and their
environment across space and time with current mapping efforts
often spanning upwards of 20 years. We present here a new
method for a robust assessment of land cover transitions over time
and apply this methodology to the yearly MapBiomas land use
land cover maps of Brazil spanning 1985–2022. Based on a
reference sample of 85,152 points, we find MapBiomas to have
limited accuracy as an indicator of yearly land use change, but
consistent over the full mapping period. Alternation, a newly
defined error component, captures the number of land use
transitions a location experiences throughout time. It is the
primary reason for differences in estimates of annual change and
is 4.6 times more frequent in the MapBiomas product than
reference data. Differences in alternations are particularly
prevalent in transitions from pasture to savanna and forest classes.
The total land use changes detected over the 37 year study period
are consistent between the reference data and the MapBiomas
classification with 232 million hectares and 252 million hectares, or
27% and 29% of the Brazilian territory respectively.
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Brazil, Data quality, Land use land cover, Mapbiomas, Time series, Uncertainty
Citação
MATOS, Ana Paula et al. Accounting for alternation in temporal quality analysis in MapBiomas Brazil. International Journal of Digital Earth, Milton Park, v. 18, n. 1, e2528604, 2025. DOI: 10.1080/17538947.2025.2528604. Disponível em: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/17538947.2025.2528604. Acesso em: 30 set. 2025.