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Using Satellite Imagery to detect changes in Vegetation in Arid Environments Kelley Keese GIS in Water Resources.

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Presentation on theme: "Using Satellite Imagery to detect changes in Vegetation in Arid Environments Kelley Keese GIS in Water Resources."— Presentation transcript:

1 Using Satellite Imagery to detect changes in Vegetation in Arid Environments Kelley Keese GIS in Water Resources

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5 87% Shrubland2.5% Grassland 10% Bare 0.5% other Land UseElevation Study Site Nevada Southern Nevada Mojave Desert 130 km NW Las Vegas 22 km x 28 km Vegetation Production Data (Ron Green, pers com)

6 AVHRR AVHRR Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer Provides 4 – 6 band multipectral data NOAA polar-orbiting satellite series Data from the University of Arizona Bi weekly composites of maximum NDVI; 1989 - 2003 Tiff format : data presented 0 – 255 bit scale ftp://aria.arizona.edu/pub/usndvi_vc/GeoTIFFS/

7 Normalized Difference Vegetation Index from AVHRR (C 2 – C 3) / (C 2 + C 3) Channel 1 - chlorophyll causes considerable absorption Channel 2 - spongy mesophyll leaf structure leads to considerable reflectance (Tucker1979, Jackson et al.1983, Tucker et al. 1991).

8 Methods Crop the dataCrop the data Convert to NDVI scale of –1 to 1Convert to NDVI scale of –1 to 1 Compute an average for months of Feb-JulyCompute an average for months of Feb-July Compute the “departure from average”Compute the “departure from average” Generate tables of NDVI values to compute the aerial average for each monthGenerate tables of NDVI values to compute the aerial average for each month Did this 90 times!!!! … and generated tables for 6 yearsDid this 90 times!!!! … and generated tables for 6 years More Raster calculations to compute the average for each monthMore Raster calculations to compute the average for each month 36 more Raster calculations to compute the DA (monthly – mean)36 more Raster calculations to compute the DA (monthly – mean)

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10 Departure from Average February 1995 Avg = 0.160

11 Departure from Average March 1995 Avg = 0.193

12 Departure from Average April 1995 Avg = 0.203

13 Departure from Average May 1995 Avg = 0.216

14 Departure from Average June 1995 Avg = 0.211

15 Departure from Average July 1995 Avg = 0.189

16 Departure from Average February 1998 Avg = 0.190

17 Departure from Average March 1998 Avg = 0.210

18 Departure from Average April 1998 Avg = 0.200

19 Departure from Average May 1998 Avg = 0.280

20 Departure from Average June 1998 Avg = 0.235

21 Departure from Average July 1998 Avg = 0.248

22 Conclusions Study shows that vegetation in desert systems is very responsive to water availability 1 km resolution satellite data does indeed detect changes in vegetation in arid environments Implications:

23 Implications Water Resources  Evapotranspiration (ET) plays a critical role in controlling groundwater recharge  Understanding response of vegetation to climate forcing should help us better determine system response to climate change  Need to understand climate/vegetation dynamics to estimate potential impact of land use change on water resources (e.g. brush control) Contaminant Transport and Remediation  Phytoremediation: use of plants to clean up toxic waste sites  Some engineered barrier designs for waste containment depend primarily on ET to minimize water movement into underlying waste


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