Encarnación Gonzalez's research while affiliated with Universidad de Huelva and other places

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Publications (3)


Cartographic sources provided by the University of Sancti Spiritus (Cuba).
Work flowchart.
Final delimitation of the Valle de los Ingenios (red area).
(a) Landsat 8 NDVI time series (the red line represents NDVI mean value). (b) Harmonic model.
Example of Landsat 8 original and harmonic model fitted values for marabou (year 2014).

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Analysis and Quantification of the Distribution of Marabou (Dichrostachys cinerea (L.) Wight & Arn.) in Valle de los Ingenios, Cuba: A Remote Sensing Approach
  • Article
  • Full-text available

February 2024

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21 Reads

Remote Sensing

Remote Sensing

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Encarnación Gonzalez

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Reinaldo Alvarez

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Cuba is struggling with a growing environmental problem: the uncontrolled spread of the allochthonous weed species marabou (Dichrostachys cinerea) throughout the country. Over the last 70 years, marabou has become a formidable invasive species that poses a threat to Cuban biodiversity and agricultural productivity. In this paper, we present a free and affordable method for regularly mapping the spatial distribution of the marabou based on the Google Earth Engine platform and ecological surveys. To test its accuracy, we develop an 18-year remote sensing analysis (2000–2018) of marabou dynamics using the Valle de los Ingenios, a Cuban UNESCO World Heritage Site, as an experimental model. Our spatial analysis reveals clear patterns of marabou distribution and highlights areas of concentrated growth. Temporal trends illustrate the aggressive nature of the species, identifying periods of expansion and decline. In addition, our system is able to detect specific, large-scale human interventions against the marabou plague in the area. The results highlight the urgent need for remedial strategies to maintain the fragile ecological balance in the region.

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Figure 2. Work flowchart.
Figure 3. Final delimitation of the Valle de los Ingenios.
Figure 4. (a) Landsat 8 NDVI time series. (b) Harmonic model.
Figure 5. Example of Landsat 8 original and harmonic model fitted values (year 2014).
Figure 6. Marabou distribution maps from years 2004 (a), 2006 (b), 2016 (c), and 2021 (d).
Analysis and Quantification of the Distribution of Marabou (Dichrostachys cinerea L. Wight & Arn.) in Valle de Los Ingenios, Cuba: A Remote Sensing Approach

January 2024

·

55 Reads

Cuba is struggling with a growing environmental problem: the uncontrolled spread of the allochthonous weed species marabou (Dichrostachys cinerea) throughout the country. Over the last 70 years, marabou has become a formidable invasive species that poses a threat to Cuban biodiversity and agricultural productivity. In this paper, we present a free and affordable method for regularly mapping the spatial distribution of the marabou based on the Google Earth Engine platform and ecological surveys. To test its accuracy, we develop an 18-year analysis (2000–2018) of marabou dynamics using the Valle de los Ingenios, a Cuban UNESCO World Heritage Site, as an experimental model. Our spatial analysis reveals clear patterns of marabou distribution and highlights areas of concentrated growth. Temporal trends illustrate the dynamic nature of the species, identifying periods of expansion and decline. In addition, our system is able to detect specific, large-scale human interventions against the marabou plague in the area. The results highlight the urgent need for remedial strategies to maintain the fragile balance in the region.


Affordable Use of Satellite Imagery in Agriculture and Development Projects: Assessing the Spatial Distribution of Invasive Weeds in the UNESCO-Protected Areas of Cuba

October 2021

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100 Reads

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4 Citations

Agriculture

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Alberto Zabalo

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Encarnacion Gonzalez

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[...]

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The effective and regular remote monitoring of agricultural activity is not always possible in developing countries because the access to cloud-based geospatial analysis platforms or expensive high-resolution satellite images are not always available. Herein, using paid high-resolution satellite images first and then free medium-resolution satellite images, we aimed to develop a cost-free, affordable method for regularly mapping the spatial distribution of sicklebush (Dichrostachys cinerea), an archetypal allochthonous invasive plant in Cuba that is becoming impossible to control owing to its rapid growth in areas planted with sugar cane in the Trinidad-Valle de los Ingenios area (Cuba), a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Two types of images were used (WorldView-2 and Landsat-8); these were subjected to supervised classification, with accuracy values of 88.7% and 93.7%, respectively. Vegetation cover was first derived from the purchased WorldView-2 image, and this information was then used as the training field to obtain spectral signatures from the Landsat-8 free image so that Landsat images may be regularly used to monitor D. cinerea infestations. The results obtained in the spatial distribution map for sicklebush in the Landsat-8 images had an overall reliability of 93.7% and a Kappa coefficient reliability of 91.9%. These values indicate high confidence in the results, which suggests that sicklebush has invaded 52.7% of the total 46,807.26-ha area of the Trinidad-Valle de los Ingenios. This process proved extremely effective and demonstrated the benefits of using high-resolution spatial images from which information can be transferred to free satellite images with a larger pixel size.

Citations (1)


... Given the enormous challenge of field assessment, as it's almost impossible to reach the marabou thicket amidst the ubiquitous bush with its many long, hard thorns, remote sensing techniques have proven to be important tools. These techniques play a crucial role in identifying and classifying the weed in various regions of Cuba, including the Valle de los Ingenios [14,15]. Remote sensing, a pivotal component of our study, leverages advanced aerospace technology and geospatial data analysis to monitor vegetation cover through satellite imagery [16,17]. ...

Reference:

Analysis and Quantification of the Distribution of Marabou (Dichrostachys cinerea L. Wight & Arn.) in Valle de Los Ingenios, Cuba: A Remote Sensing Approach
Affordable Use of Satellite Imagery in Agriculture and Development Projects: Assessing the Spatial Distribution of Invasive Weeds in the UNESCO-Protected Areas of Cuba

Agriculture