GET TO KNOW THE STEPS OF THE MAPBIOMAS METHODOLOGY 

Here we detail the MapBiomas Chaco methodology step by step. For each class treated in the map there are specific perculiarties and characteristics that can be checked in detail in the ATBD in its appendices. .

It all starts with Landsat satellite imagery, with 30-meter resolution, available for free on the Google Earth Engine platform and with a time series of more than 30 years. It takes 76 Landsat images to cover Brazil, each with tens of millions of pixels. Images can contain clouds, smoke, and other artifacts that can "dirty" them. To produce a clean image, the cloudless pixels are selected from the available images for the selected period. For each of these pixels are extracted metrics that explain the behavior of the pixel in that year. This is done with each of the 7 satellite spectral bands as well as for the calculated spectral fractions and indices. For example, for Band 1 the median of band values ​​in the period, the maximum value, the minimum value in the year and the amplitude of variation is collected. At the end each pixel for one year carries up to 91 layers of information.

For each year a mosaic covering Chaco biome is set up representing the behavior of each pixel through 91 metrics or layers of information. This mosaic set is saved as a collection of data (Asset) within the Google Earth Engine platform. These mosaics will be used in two main ways. First as source parameters for the algorithm to produce classification (see next step). It is also from this mosaic that RGB composition is derived allowing to visualization of the background image in the platform MapBiomas. This composition is also used for the collection of training samples and samples for assessment of accuracy by visual interpretation.

Stable samples are filtered to exclude mislabeled pixels. For its detection, a methodology with Isolation Forest was used, an unsupervised algorithm that can detect anomalies (outliers) directly based on the concept of isolation without using any metric. The modeling allows automatically labeling each sample as outlier or normal from the score. Through a toolkit developed in Google Earth Engine, it is possible to evaluate each sample and verify its characteristics.

From the image mosaics, the land cover and use map (forest, field, agriculture, pasture, urban area, water, etc.) is made. To do so, MapBiomas analysts use an automatic classifier called "random forest", which runs on Google Earth Engine. This system is based on machine learning: for each topic to be classified, the machines are "trained" with samples of the targets to be classified. These samples are obtained by means of reference maps, generation of maps of stable classes of the previous series of MapBiomas Chaco and by direct collection by visual interpretation of the Landsat images.

The spatial filter aims to increase the spatial consistency of the data by eliminating isolated or border pixels. Neighborhood rules are defined that can lead to a change in pixel classification. For example, a pixel that has less than two out of the nine neighboring pixels in the same class will be reclassified to the predominant class in the neighborhood. The filter applies to all classes and years in the collection.

Para reducir las inconsistencias temporales, en particular cambios en la cobertura y el uso que son imposibles o no están permitidos (por ejemplo, Bosque natural > No bosque > Bosque natural) y para corregir fallas debido al desbordamiento de nubes o falta de datos, se aplica un filtro temporal. Cada clase puede tener reglas de filtrado temporales específicas. El filtro temporal se aplica a cada píxel analizando todos los años de la Colección (por ejemplo, la Colección 4 tiene 38 años).

In order to understand changes in land cover and land use, maps are produced with class transitions between different pairs of selected years. It is thus possible to visualize the dynamism of the territory, and answer questions such as how much of the forest has turned pasture from one year to another, for example, among other changes in the landscape. Transition maps are produced pixel by pixel and after finalized also pass through a spatial filter to eliminate isolated transition or border pixels. From these maps are constructed the transition matrices for each administrative unit, available on the MapBiomas Chaco platform.