Forests play a critical role in Earth’s ecosystem, yet monitoring their long-term, large-scale spatiotemporal dynamics remains a significant challenge. This study addresses this gap by developing an integrated framework to map annual forest distribution in Hunan, China, from 1999 to 2023 at a high resolution of 30 m. Our methodology combines multi-temporal satellite imagery (Landsat 5/7/8/9) with key environmental variables, including digital elevation models, temperature, and precipitation data. To efficiently reconstruct historical maps, training samples were automatically derived from a reliable 2023 forest product using a transferable logic, drastically reducing manual annotation effort. Comprehensive evaluations demonstrate the robustness of our approach: (1) Qualitative analyses reveal superior spatial detail and temporal consistency compared to existing global forest maps. (2) Rigorous quantitative validation based on ∼9000 reference samples confirms high and stable accuracy (∼92.4%) and recall (∼91.9%) over the 24-year period. (3) Furthermore, comparisons with government forestry statistics show strong agreement, validating the practical utility of the data. This work provides a valuable, accurate long-term dataset that forms a scientific basis for critical downstream applications such as ecological conservation planning, carbon stock assessment, and climate change research, thereby highlighting the transformative potential of multi-source data fusion and automated methods in advancing geospatial monitoring.
Liu et al. (Wed,) studied this question.