Monitoring and Assessment of US Drylands
Abstract
Monitoring of drylands requires time scales of 15 years or more in order to replicate twice the major climatic phenomena such as El Niño that have both proximal and ultimate consequences in this ecosystems. Spatially, federal agencies such as the USFS must comply with laws that request they report the condition and trend of US drylands at the national spatial scale. The MODIS sensor on both TERRA and AQUA platforms has been collecting data operational data since 2000 that include value added products such as the enhanced vegetation index (EVI), leaf area index (LAI), Land Cover, Burn Area, and net primary productivity (NPP) that can provide multiple indicators of Dryland condition and trend for now 13-years. Consequently, this sensor meets the space and time criteria necessary to begin monitoring US drylands. Additionally, the USDA National Agricultural Statistics Service has been collecting data on the spatial distribution and numbers of livestock including sheep, goats, and cattle, since the 1890's and contemporary and reconstructed climatic records at national scales go back even further in time. Time series data on climatic and land management drivers provides a basis for assessment of the causes of possible land degradation. We provide here an assessment of US Dryland condition and trend in regards to multiple indicators including land cover change in patch dynamics, NPP, and land surface temperature. For instance we show that from 2000 to 2011 US Drylands exhibit a net carbon gain that is reflected in increased connectivity of US grasslands, but conversely a decrease in surface temperatures that are indicative of increased woody encroachment. We also show that both climate, particularly drought, and livestock grazing are drivers of these dynamics.
- Publication:
-
AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2012
- Bibcode:
- 2012AGUFM.H52A..07W
- Keywords:
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- 0439 BIOGEOSCIENCES / Ecosystems;
- structure and dynamics;
- 0480 BIOGEOSCIENCES / Remote sensing;
- 1813 Eco-Hydrology