4.5 Article

Dynamic land cover information: bridging the gap between remote sensing and natural resource management

Journal

ECOLOGY AND SOCIETY
Volume 18, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

RESILIENCE ALLIANCE
DOI: 10.5751/ES-05229-180102

Keywords

dynamic land cover; fractional ground cover; imagery archives; land management practices; natural resource management outcomes; on-ground actions, remote sensing

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Environmental decision-makers are increasingly demanding detailed spatial coverages with high temporal frequency to assess trends and changes in the extent and condition of wetlands, species habitats, farmlands, forests, rangelands, soil, water, and vegetation. Dynamic land cover information can substantially meet these requirements. Access to satellite-based time series information provides an unprecedented opportunity to better focus natural resource management (NRM) in Australia. Opportunities include assessing the extent and condition of key assets, prioritizing investment in key localities and time periods, improving targeting of scarce public funding, and monitoring and evaluating the outcome of this investment to assist land managers in improving land management practices to meet wider community social, economic, and environmental goals. We illustrate how these key decision points can be enhanced by linking dynamic land cover information to a stepped cycle model. We use the stepped cycle model to present two case studies, the management of fire and soil erosion, which demonstrate the application of dynamic land cover information to improve NRM decision-making across three broad stakeholder groups (national, regional, local). We use the case studies to highlight how accurate dynamic land cover information has been used to improve the design and reporting of national NRM programs.

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