Ecosystem Performance, Productivity and Sustainability
Remotely-sensed data forms the backbone of the large-scale maps, models and assessments created at EROS to advance the understanding of Ecosystem Performance, Productivity and Sustainability.
Detailed data from cooperators with site-specific flux towers are integrated to create models of a land cover type - grassland, for example – which can be simulated across a region. Tasks describe exchanges of Gross Primary Productivity (GPP) and Net Ecosystem Exchange (NEE) in the Northern Great Plains and other regions.
Cooperation with the Bureau of Land Management (BLM), universities, and others provides the ground data to develop and validate pixel-specific models of ecosystem performance based on the remote sensing archive, climate, and site potential.
This modeling, EROS’ rich archival resources and the research team’s special ability to combine near real-time, remotely-sensed data with other large spatial data sets, also allows for the evaluation, mapping, and dynamic monitoring of ecosystem performance.
The work is funded through the USGS Land Change Science (LCS) Program, which strives to understand the nation's most pressing environmental, natural resource, and economic challenges by providing the information and tools necessary and identifying possible solutions.
Additional funding comes from USGS National Land Imaging program, BLM, and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS).
EROS’ remote sensing ecology projects include permafrost and biomass mapping in Alaska, the study of invasive grass in the Great Basin, and the identification of lands with the potential for biofuels feedstock. Follow these links for more detailed information on those projects:
- Monitoring Arctic and boreal ecosystems through the assimilation of field-based studies, remote sensing, and modelling
- Cheatgrass Dieoff Time-series Dynamics, 2000-2010
- Identifying Lands Suitable for Biofuel Feedstock Crops by Dynamic Modeling of Ecosystem Performance
- Carbon Flux Quantification in the Great Plains
Below are other science projects associated with this project.
Below are publications associated with this project.
Distribution of near-surface permafrost in Alaska: estimates of present and future conditions
Using normalized difference vegetation index to estimate carbon fluxes from small rotationally grazed pastures
Classifying the hydrologic function of prairie potholes with remote sensing and GIS
On the terminology of the spectral vegetation index (NIR – SWIR)/(NIR + SWIR)
Response of spectral vegetation indices to soil moisture in grasslands and shrublands
Upscaling carbon fluxes over the Great Plains grasslands: Sinks and sources
Detecting Ecosystem Performance Anomalies for Land Management in the Upper Colorado River Basin Using Satellite Observations, Climate Data, and Ecosystem Models
A Comparative Analysis of three different MODIS NDVI data sets for Alaska and adjacent Canada
A self-trained classification technique for producing 30 m percent-water maps from Landsat data
Climate-driven interannual variability in net ecosystem exchange in the Northern Great Plains grasslands
Analysis of dynamic thresholds for the normalized difference water index
Modeling and dynamic monitoring of ecosystem performance in the Yukon River Basin
Integrating modelling and remote sensing to identify ecosystem performance anomalies in the boreal forest, Yukon River Basin, Alaska
Remotely-sensed data forms the backbone of the large-scale maps, models and assessments created at EROS to advance the understanding of Ecosystem Performance, Productivity and Sustainability.
Detailed data from cooperators with site-specific flux towers are integrated to create models of a land cover type - grassland, for example – which can be simulated across a region. Tasks describe exchanges of Gross Primary Productivity (GPP) and Net Ecosystem Exchange (NEE) in the Northern Great Plains and other regions.
Cooperation with the Bureau of Land Management (BLM), universities, and others provides the ground data to develop and validate pixel-specific models of ecosystem performance based on the remote sensing archive, climate, and site potential.
This modeling, EROS’ rich archival resources and the research team’s special ability to combine near real-time, remotely-sensed data with other large spatial data sets, also allows for the evaluation, mapping, and dynamic monitoring of ecosystem performance.
The work is funded through the USGS Land Change Science (LCS) Program, which strives to understand the nation's most pressing environmental, natural resource, and economic challenges by providing the information and tools necessary and identifying possible solutions.
Additional funding comes from USGS National Land Imaging program, BLM, and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS).
EROS’ remote sensing ecology projects include permafrost and biomass mapping in Alaska, the study of invasive grass in the Great Basin, and the identification of lands with the potential for biofuels feedstock. Follow these links for more detailed information on those projects:
- Monitoring Arctic and boreal ecosystems through the assimilation of field-based studies, remote sensing, and modelling
- Cheatgrass Dieoff Time-series Dynamics, 2000-2010
- Identifying Lands Suitable for Biofuel Feedstock Crops by Dynamic Modeling of Ecosystem Performance
- Carbon Flux Quantification in the Great Plains
Below are other science projects associated with this project.
Below are publications associated with this project.