South African National Land-Cover (SANLC) 2018

What is land cover data and what does it do?

Land-Cover data is a crucial reference dataset that informs a wide variety of activities ranging from environmental planning and protection, economic development, compliance monitoring, enforcement, and strategic decision making.

In order to monitor and manage landscape change over time, it is necessary to understand both, where change has occurred, as well as what has changed.

 

1990 & 2013-2014
 

The production of the 1990 and 2013-14 SA National Land-Cover datasets allowed quantification of landscape change over a 25 year period to be determined both spatially and informatively. This process was greatly facilitated by both datasets having been generated using equivalent image data and mapping procedures so that both datasets were comparable in terms of detail, scale, and consistency of information content.

For both national land-cover datasets semi-automated spectral modelling procedures were used to generate the basic land-cover components, i.e. water, tree, bush, grass and bare ground. The basic land-cover components form the ‘building blocks’ upon which the more detailed final land-cover/landuse data were derived and defined. These semi-automated land-cover mapping techniques offered a more efficient alternative to conventional classification techniques (i.e. analyst-assisted pixel-based classifiers), allowing rapid production of standardised, yet informative land-cover information and classification. This provided the necessary standardised references from which landscape changes could be determined and quantified.

 

The South African National Land Cover 2018 dataset
 

The new South African National Land-Cover 2018 dataset has been generated from 20 meter multi-seasonal Sentinel 2 satellite imagery. The imagery used represents the full temporal range of available imagery acquired by Sentinel 2 during the period 01 January 2018 to 31 December 2018. The SANLC 2018 dataset is based primarily on the new gazetted land-cover classification standard (SANS 19144-2) with 73 classes of information and is comparable, with the previous 1990 and 2013-14 South African National Land-Cover (SANLC) datasets. The South African National Land-Cover 2018 dataset is available on an open licence agreement.

The SANLC 2018 data was launched on the 1st October 2019 and is now available for download from the E-GIS website, download link: https://egis.environment.gov.za/gis_data_downloads.

 

The following is available for download:

  • South African National Land-Cover (SANLC) 2018 Report
  • SANLC 2018 Accuracy Assessment Points
  • SANLC 2018 GEOTIFF
  • SANLC 2018 IMG (Erdas)
  • SANLC 2018 Launch Presentation

 

List of the classes available in the 2018 dataset:

 

No.

Legend Colour

2018 NLC Class Name

1

 

Contiguous (indigenous) Forest (combined very high, high, medium)

2

 

Contiguous Low Forest & Thicket (combined classes)

3

 

Dense Forest & Woodland (35 - 75% cc)

4

 

Open Woodland (10 - 35% cc)

5

 

Contiguous & Dense Planted Forest (combined classes)

6

 

Open & Sparse Planted Forest

7

 

Temporary Unplanted Forest

8

 

Low Shrubland (other regions)

9

 

Low Shrubland (Fynbos)

10

 

Low Shrubland (Succulent Karoo)

11

 

Low Shrubland (Nama Karoo)

12

 

Sparsely Wooded Grassland (5 - 10% cc)

13

 

Natural Grassland

14

 

Natural Rivers

15

 

Natural Estuaries & Lagoons

16

 

Natural Ocean, Coastal

17

 

Natural Lakes

18

 

Natural Pans (flooded @ obsv time)

19

 

Artificial Dams (incl. canals)

20

 

Artificial Sewage Ponds

21

 

Artificial Flooded Mine Pits

22

 

Herbaceous Wetlands (currently mapped)

23

 

Herbaceous Wetlands (previous mapped extent)

24

 

Mangrove Wetlands

25

 

Natural Rock Surfaces

26

 

Dry Pans

27

 

Eroded Lands

28

 

Sand Dunes (terrestrial)

29

 

Coastal Sand Dunes & Beach Sand

30

 

Bare Riverbed Material

31

 

Other Bare

32

 

Cultivated Commercial Permanent Orchards

33

 

Cultivated Commercial Permanent Vines

34

 

Cultivated Commercial Sugarcane Pivot Irrigated

35

 

Commercial Permanent Pineapples

36

 

Cultivated Commercial Sugarcane Non-Pivot (all other)

37

 

Cultivated Emerging Farmer Sugarcane Non-Pivot (all other)

38

 

Commercial Annuals Pivot Irrigated

39

 

Commercial Annuals Non-Pivot Irrigated

40

 

Commercial Annuals Crops Rain-Fed / Dryland / Non-Irrigated

41

 

Subsistence / Small-Scale Annual Crops

42

 

Fallow Land & Old Fields (Trees)

43

 

Fallow Land & Old Fields (Bush)

44

 

Fallow Land & Old Fields (Grass)

45

 

Fallow Land & Old Fields (Bare)

46

 

Fallow Land & Old Fields (Low Shrub)

47

 

Residential Formal (Tree)

48

 

Residential Formal (Bush)

49

 

Residential Formal (low veg / grass)

50

 

Residential Formal (Bare)

51

 

Residential Informal (Tree)

52

 

Residential Informal (Bush)

53

 

Residential Informal (low veg / grass)

54

 

Residential Informal (Bare)

55

 

Village Scattered (bare only)

56

 

Village Dense (bare only)

57

 

Smallholdings (Tree)

58

 

Smallholdings (Bush)

59

 

Smallholdings (low veg / grass)

60

 

Smallholdings (Bare)

61

 

Urban Recreational Fields (Tree)

62

 

Urban Recreational Fields (Bush)

63

 

Urban Recreational Fields (Grass)

64

 

Urban Recreational Fields (Bare)

65

 

Commercial

66

 

Industrial

67

 

Roads & Rail (Major Linear)

68

 

Mines: Surface Infrastructure

69

 

Mines: Extraction Sites: Open Cast & Quarries combined

70

 

Mines: Extraction Sites: Salt Mines

71

 

Mines: Waste (Tailings) & Resource Dumps

72

 

Land-fills

73

 

Fallow Land & Old Fields (wetlands)