90 likes | 187 Views
Using Advanced Satellite Products to Better Understand I&M Data within the Context of the Larger Ecoregion. Jeff Morisette, USGS Fort Collins Science Center Kevin James, NPS I&M Heartland Network w/ Colin Talbert, USGS Fort and Pete Ma, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center. Background….
E N D
Using Advanced Satellite Products to Better Understand I&M Data within the Context of the Larger Ecoregion Jeff Morisette, USGS Fort Collins Science Center Kevin James, NPS I&M Heartland Networkw/ Colin Talbert, USGS Fortand Pete Ma, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
Background… • “Parks are part of larger ecological systems and must be managed in that context” (Fancy, Gross, & Carter, 2008). • Worked funded through the USGS/NPS National Park Monitoring Project. Currently just starting year 2 of 3. • Primary objective: help park managers use cutting edge moderate- (250m) and high- (30m) resolution remote sensing products to place I&M observations within the context of the larger ecosystem.
Modified TIMESAT Parameters Beginning of season End of season Length of season Base value Peak time Peak value Amplitude Left derivative Right derivative Integral over season - absolute Integral over season - scaled Maximum value Minimum value Mean value Root Mean Square Error Phenology Product User Guide, Tan et alhttp://accweb.nascom.nasa.gov/project/docs/User_guide_PHN.pdf.
Objectives: • Characterize phenology across the Southern Plains, Heartland, and Northern Great Plains Networks from 2000 on. • Building on the remote sensed vegetation indices and available Network data, identify appropriate sampling periods and locations that maximize information content for vegetation vital signs monitoring. • Evaluate the impact of management actions in light of intra- and inter-annual vegetation and climate variability.
Initial parks: selection criteria • Proposal focused on three networks: Southern Plains, Northern Great Plains, and Heartland Network • We wanted at least one park per network • Fairly large in spatial extent • Existing data from either I&M, veg map, or fire monitoring • Fairly native grassland