The identification of tree species can provide a useful and efficient tool for forest managers for planning and monitoring purposes.Hyperspectral data provide sufficient spectral information to classify individual tree species.Two non-parametric classifiers, support vector machines (SVM) and random forest (RF), have resulted in high accuracies in previous classification studies.This research takes a comparative classification approach to examine the SVM and RF classifiers in the complex and heterogeneous forests of Muir Woods National Monument and Kent Creek Canyon in Marin County, California.The influence of object- or pixel-based training samples and segmentation Flashlight size on the object-oriented classification is also explored.
To reduce the data dimensionality, a minimum DRY/DAMAGED SHAMPOO noise fraction transform was applied to the mosaicked hyperspectral image, resulting in the selection of 27 bands for the final classification.Each classifier was also assessed individually to identify any advantage related to an increase in training sample size or an increase in object segmentation size.All classifications resulted in overall accuracies above 90%.No difference was found between classifiers when using object-based training samples.SVM outperformed RF when additional training samples were used.
An increase in training samples was also found to improve the individual performance of the SVM classifier.