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Article Abstract

Land cover and plant species identification using satellite images and deep learning approaches have recently been a widely addressed area of research. However, mangroves, a specific species that have significantly declined in quantity and quality worldwide despite their numerous benefits, have not been the subject of attention. The novelty of this research is to deal with this species based on an advanced deep learning solution (a proposed ensemble U-Net model) and a high-resolution Planet satellite imagery (5 m x 5 m) in a case study of Ngoc Hien district, Ca Mau province, Vietnam. Twelve single U-Net backbone models were trained, and three quantitative metrics (Intersection over Union, F1-score, and Overall Accuracy) were used to evaluate. The findings indicate that three out of twelve models (MobileNet, SEResNeXt-101 and Efficientnet-B7) experienced the most efficient assessment results for identifying all classes, in which the MobileNet model was the best. These models were applied for the ensemble model's development. The ensemble model's quantitative assessment metrics increased considerably by about 3-10% compared to the single-component models. The IoU, F1-score, and OA values of this model were 80.08%, 95.82%, and 95.90%, respectively. Three classes of mangrove species (Avicennia alba, Rhizophora apiculate, and mixed mangroves) in the ensemble model had more uniform assessment results. In conclusion, to achieve optimal classification outcomes, a land-cover map comprising mangrove species is possibly established using the proposed ensemble model, while a distribution map of mangrove species enables to be developed using the MobileNet model.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12327635PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0327315PLOS

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