National level satellite-based crop field inventories in smallholder landscapes
Philippe Rufin, Pauline Lucie Hammer, Leon-Friedrich Thomas, S\'a Nogueira Lisboa, Natasha Ribeiro, Almeida Sitoe, Patrick Hostert, Patrick Meyfroidt

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution satellite imagery and deep learning to create the first detailed national crop field map for Mozambique, revealing small field sizes and diverse farming systems crucial for sustainable policy development.
Contribution
It introduces a novel approach combining high-resolution data and transfer learning to produce a comprehensive, accurate, and transferable national-scale crop field dataset in complex smallholder landscapes.
Findings
Achieved 93% overall accuracy in crop land delineation.
Produced a detailed map of 21 million fields covering Mozambique.
Revealed that most fields are smaller than 0.5 ha, indicating smallholder dominance.
Abstract
The design of science-based policies to improve the sustainability of smallholder agriculture is challenged by a limited understanding of fundamental system properties, such as the spatial distribution of active cropland and field size. We integrate very high spatial resolution (1.5 m) Earth observation data and deep transfer learning to derive crop field delineations in complex agricultural systems at the national scale, while maintaining minimum reference data requirements and enhancing transferability. We provide the first national-level dataset of 21 million individual fields for Mozambique (covering ~800,000 km2) for 2023. Our maps separate active cropland from non-agricultural land use with an overall accuracy of 93% and balanced omission and commission errors. Field-level spatial agreement reached median intersection over union (IoU) scores of 0.81, advancing the state-of-the-art…
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