Engineering & Technologies, Vol 10, No 6 (2017)

REMOTE SENSING METHODS FOR ASSESSING DEGRADATION OF ARMENIA’S HIGHLAND PASTURES

Garegin Tepanosyan, Shushanik Asmaryan, Vahagn Mauradyan, Armen Saghatelyan

Abstract


In Armenia soil degradation is determined by different factors, including overgrazing, and is a grave concern in terms of food safety and sustainable development. Assessing soil degradation is essential to reveal probable consequences and potential management measures. This article considers a possibility of determining degradation related soil surface components (fractional vegetation cover-FVC, bare soils fractions- BSF and surface rock cover- SRC) with help of linear spectral unmixing (LSU) and NDVI-SMA methods, using a QuickBird satellite imagery, and their applicability to assessment and mapping of degradation degree of pasturelands. The results have indicated that LSU and NDVI-SMA methods as applied to a QuickBird satellite image gives a unique opportunity to precisely determine FVC and BSF, whereas the proposed soil degradation assessment and mapping method adequately reflects the actual situation.