Citation:
Daniel M. Simms, Toby W. Waine and John C. Taylor. Improved estimates of opium cultivation in Afghanistan using imagery-based stratification. International Journal of Remote Sensing, 2017, Volume 28, Issue 13, pp3785-3799
Abstract:
The United Nations O ce on Drugs and Crime and the US Government make extensive
use of remote sensing to quantify and monitor trends in Afghanistans illicit
opium production. Cultivation gures from their independent annual surveys can
vary because of systematic di erences in survey methodologies relating to spectral
strati cation and the addition of a pixel bu er to the agricultural area. We investigated
the e ect of strati cation and bu ering on area estimates of opium poppy using
SPOT5 imagery covering the main opium cultivation area of Helmand province and
sample data of poppy elds interpreted from very high resolution satellite imagery.
The e ect of resolution was investigated by resampling the original 10 m pixels to
20, 30 and 60 m, representing the range of available imagery. The number of strata
(1, 4, 8, 13, 23, 40) and sample fraction (0.2 to 2%) used in the estimate were also investigated.
Strati cation reduced the con dence interval by improving the precision
of estimates. Cultivation estimates of poppy using 40 spectral strata and a sample
fraction of 1.1% had a similar precision to direct expansion estimates using a 2%
sample fraction. Strati ed estimates were more robust to changes in sample size and
distribution. The mapping of the agricultural area had a signi cant e ect on poppy
cultivation estimates in Afghanistan, where the area of total agricultural production
can vary signi cantly between years. The ndings of this research explain di erences
in cultivation gures of the opium monitoring programmes in Afghanistan and recommendations
can be applied to improve resource monitoring in other geographic
areas.