Coastal Restoration Trust of New Zealand

Coastal Dune Ecosystem Reference Database

Quantifying vegetation cover on coastal active dunes using nationwide aerial image analysis

Author
Cate Ryan , Hannah L. Buckley, Craig D. Bishop, Graham Hinchliffe &; Bradley S. Case
Year
2025
Journal / Source
Remote sensing in ecology and conservation
Volume
11
Number
1
Pages
40-57
Keywords
Ficinia spiralis
Summary
Coastal active dunes provide vital biodiversity, habitat, and ecosystem services, yet they are one of the most endangered and understudied ecosystems worldwide. Therefore, monitoring the status of these systems is essential, but field vegetation surveys are time-consuming and expensive. Remotely sensed aerial imagery offers spatially continuous, low-cost, high-resolution coverage, allowing for vegetation mapping across larger areas than traditional field surveys. Taking Aotearoa New Zealand as a case study, we used a nationally representative sample of coastal active dunes to classify vegetation from red-green-blue (RGB) high-resolution (0.075–0.75 m) aerial imagery with object-based image analysis. The mean overall accuracy was 0.76 across 21 beaches for aggregated classes, and key cover classes, such as sand, sandbinders, and woody vegetation, were discerned. However, differentiation among woody vegetation species on semi-stable and stable dunes posed a challenge. We developed a national cover typology from the classification, comprising seven vegetation types. Classification tree models showed that where human activity was higher, it was more important than geomorphic factors in influencing the relative percent cover of the different active dune cover classes. Our methods provide a quantitative approach to characterizing the cover classes on active dunes at a national scale, which are relevant for conservation management, including habitat mapping, determining species occupancy, indigenous dominance, and the representativeness of remaining active dunes.