A global view of remote sensing of rangelands: Evolution, applications, future pathways
The application of digital remote sensing to rangelands is as long as the history of digital remote sensing itself. Before the launch of the Earth Resources Technology Satellite (ERTS) – later renamed Landsat, scientists were evaluating the use of multispectral aerial imagery to map soils and range vegetation (Yost and Wenderoth 1969). During the late 1960’s, the promise of ERTS, designed to drastically improve our ability to update maps and study earth resources, particularly in developing countries, was eagerly anticipated by a number of government agencies (Carter 1969). With the ERTS launch on July 23, 1972, a flurry of research activity aimed at the application of this new data source to map earth resources began. Practitioners who pioneered the use of satellite based digital remote sensing found the new data source a significant value for rangeland assessments (e.g., Rouse et al., 1973, Rouse et al., 1974, Bauer 1976). This early work established many of the basic techniques still in use today to assess and monitor global rangelands. The following sub-sections discuss the evolution of remote sensing data, methods, and approaches in various decades.
Citation Information
| Publication Year | 2024 |
|---|---|
| Title | A global view of remote sensing of rangelands: Evolution, applications, future pathways |
| DOI | 10.1201/9781003541165-14 |
| Authors | Matthew Reeves, Robert Washington-Allen, Jay Angerer, E. Hunt, Wasantha Kulawardhana, Lalit Kumar, Tatiana Loboda, Thomas Loveland, Graciela Metternicht, R. Ramsey, Joanne Hall, Trenton Benedict, Pedro Millikan, Angus Retallack, Arjan Meddens, William Smith, Wen Zhang |
| Publication Type | Book Chapter |
| Publication Subtype | Book Chapter |
| Index ID | 70270587 |
| Record Source | USGS Publications Warehouse |
| USGS Organization | Earth Resources Observation and Science (EROS) Center |