Satellites Help Map Soil Carbon Flux
Posted on: Tuesday, 25 March 2008, 16:31 CDT
Scientists Integrate Soil Science Data with Remote Sensing to Report Soil Carbon Flux Resulting from Land Management Changes.Changes in soil carbon occur with changes in land management. Scientists at Oak Ridge National Laboratory and The University of Tennessee investigated quantifying soil carbon changes over large regions. They integrated remote sensing products with a national carbon accounting framework in a project funded by the U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Office of Earth Science. Results of the study were published in the March issue of the Soil Science Society of America Journal and were also presented at the NASA Joint Workshop on Biodiversity, Terrestrial Ecology, and Related Applied Sciences in August 2006.
Tris West, project leader, stated, “The use of remote sensing products allows for the identification of soil and environmental attributes that are associated with each unique combination of planted crop and associated management inputs at the sub-county scale.” The 1992 National Land Cover Data, based on Landsat remote sensing data, was initially used in the carbon accounting framework . The use of these data allowed for estimated changes in soil carbon flux to be delineated at a 30-meter resolution across four land-use categories: row crops, small grains, pasture/hay, and fallow. The spatially-resolved results can also be used for comparison to other site specific measurements, such as measurements from eddy flux towers and atmospheric transport models, currently being developed under the multi-agency North American Carbon Program.
The study resulted in the integration of remote sensing with soil science and agricultural economics, which was used to predict future land use. The study is a proof-of-concept that illustrates the ability to model carbon dynamics associated with actual crop fields for entire regions or continents. The spatially-explicit carbon accounting framework is currently limited by the temporal and spatial extent of current remote sensing products. Future work includes the integration of land-use data sets based on MODIS and the Indian Remote Sensing satellite. Through the integration of inventory data and remote sensing data, the scientists expect to make enhanced land management data sets available to the scientific community in the near future.
---
Photo Caption: Landsat 7 (NASA)
---
On the Net:
Oak Ridge National Laboratory
University of Tennessee
The full article is available for no charge for 30 days following the date of this summary. View the abstract at: http://soil.scijournals.org/cgi/content/full/72/2/285
Soil Science Society of America Journal
The Soil Science Society of America (SSSA)
Related Articles
- Lab Group Recognizes the National Changing Diabetes Program for New Study on Quality Measures in Diabetes
- National Changing Diabetes Program Supports Improvements in Health Cost Estimates
- Engineering Change Management Recommendations Could Save Industry Hundreds of Millions!
- Call for Presentations: 2009 National Knowledge Management Conference
- Embarcadero(R) Change Manager(TM) Transforms the Database Change Management Lifecycle
- ChangeScape, Healthcare Change Management Firm, Adds Lacombe and Solverson As Principals
- Change Management: Antecedents and Consequences in Casino CRM
- Atempo Announces Apple Data Protection Seminar Series; Seminars Empower Apple Enterprise Users to Implement Solid Data Protection Strategies for Successful Information Lifecycle Management
- Onaro Partners With Leading Storage Vendors to Attain Broad Adoption of Change Management for SANs
User Comments (0)


RSS Feeds