Remote sensing: Remote sensing is the science of acquiring information about
the earth’s surface without actually being in contact with it. This is done by
sensing and recording reflected or emitted energy and processing, analyzing and
applying that information.
Geographical
Information System (GIS): GIS is a systematic integration of computer hardware,
software, and spatial data, for capturing, storing, displaying, updating
manipulating, and analyzing, in order to solve complex management problems.
Key components of
GIS: The GIS
constitutes of five key components, namely hardware, software, procedure, data,
and users as shown in fig. These five components need to be in balance to
function any information system satisfactorily.
Hardware, software
and procedure for capture, storage, processing, analysis, display etc.
Data means
Maps, aerial photographs, satellite images, statistic tables, etc.
Users for
Design of standards, updating, analysis and implementation.
Applications of GIS in Agriculture
Geographic Information Systems are incredibly
helpful in being able to map and project current and future fluctuations in
precipitation, temperature, crop output, and more. By mapping geographic and
geologic features of current (and potential) farmland scientists and farmers
can work together to create more effective and efficient farming techniques;
this could increase food production in parts of the world that are struggling
to produce enough for the people around them. GIS can analyze soil data
combined with historical farming practices to determine what are the best crops
to plant, where they should go, and how to maintain soil nutrition levels to
best benefit the plants.
Many organizations are now implementing GIS systems including
the USDA. They use many GIS variations in each of the USDA sectors to best
capture what that department specializes in; in recent months, however, the
benefit of combining this information has been realized due to the incredible
capacity of GIS to transform and combine large amounts of data into a data set.
In the United States GIS systems are used by the USDA to protect crops, solve
crop issues, and investigate fraudulent claims of crop damage as well as give
farmers an easy way to access information about their crops season by season.
Agricultural Geographic Information Systems (AGIS) can map not
only topography and crop health, but help solve wider economic issues in
municipalities and urban centers that may stem from rural farming practices.
Farmers in the States are able to access the GIS data on their lands; a program
called CropScape and another called VegScape allows farmers to interact with the data without having a GIS
themselves, ask questions and interact with the data as well as provide
valuable on-ground data that can’t be gathered via satellite. Jeffrey Bailey,
the chief of the National Agricultural Statistics Service’s Geospatial
Information Branch, estimates the accuracy of their crop data is in the
mid-90th percentile with the added ground data from farmers.
GIS applications
·
Crop
health analysis
·
Precision
agriculture
·
Compliance
mapping
·
Yield
estimation
Scope
- Crop average estimation
- Crop modeling for yield & production forecast
/ estimation
- Crop & Orchard monitoring
Benefits
•
Timely
availability of crop statistics for decision making & planning
•
Crop
growth monitoring
•
Soil
status monitoring
•
Regular
reports regarding total area under cultivation
Applications of GIS in forestry:
Forestry involves the management
of a broad range of natural resources within a forested area. In addition to
timber, forests provide such resources as grazing land for animals, wildlife
habitat, water resources and recreation areas. The U.S. Forest Service is
responsible for the management of forest harvesting, grazing leases,
recreational areas, wildlife habitat, mining activities as well as protecting
endangered species. To balance the competing resource conservation and resource
use, activities must be accommodated. Accessing the feasibility of these
multiple uses is greatly enhanced by the use of GIS techniques.For example, the GIS for Flathead National Forest in Montana includes digital terrain data, vegetation associations from Landsat satellite data, timber compartments, land types, precipitation, land ownership, administrative districts and the drainage network. The GIS has been utilized for such analyses as timber harvesting, habitat protection and planning the location of scenic roads.
Over the past eight years, GIS technology has been widely accepted by public as well as private forestry agencies. In large part this has been a result of the benefit of using GIS technology over current forest maps. The primary management tool for timber production in America is the forest inventory. It is used to access the existing forest resource and develop harvest schedules and treatment programs to project future timber supplies and for other operational planning activities. Forest inventory data is collected using remote sensing techniques.
The conventional forest inventory was done progressively with a small portion of the forest being inventoried each year. To update a forest cover map could take 20 years or more with expensive manual drafting. With GIS, the forest cover maps can be updated on a constant basis and it provides the forest managers more current data than what was previously available. With GIS technology, the average age of the information in the forest data base could be reduced from 20 years to only a few weeks. The time factor alone has led to a wide acceptance and large demand for GIS applications in forestry.
In itself, the use of GIS to update the forest inventory maps is not much more than automated cartography but it is the analytical power of GIS that sets it apart from cartography. The GIS can store and analyze the forest information in ways that could not be previously done. It can be used to calculate the harvestable timber in the forest or model the spread of a forest fire.
Scope
•
Satellite
image based forest resource mapping and updation
•
Forest
change detection
•
Forest
resource inventory
•
GIS
database development
Benefits
•
Availability
of baseline information
•
Planning
for aforestation strategies
•
Futuristic
resource planning
•
Sustainability
of environment
•
Wild
life conservation & development for
recreation purpose
Land cover and Land
use:
Land cover is the physical material at the surface of the
earth. Land covers include grass, asphalt, trees, bare
ground, water, etc.
"Land cover" is
distinct from "land use", despite the two terms often being used
interchangeably. Land use is a description of how people utilize the land and of socio-economic
activity, Such as human activities
using the land for industrial zones, residential zones, etc.
Land cover refers to
features of land surface, which may be natural, semi-natural, managed, or
manmade. They are directly observable by a remote sensor. Land use, on the
other hand, refers to activities on land or classification of land according to
how it is being used, such as residential, industrial, commercial,
agricultural, recreational, etc.
Land use denotes the human
employment of the land, so that a change in land-use at any location may
involve a shift to a different type of use, for instance, from farming to
residential, or a change in the intensity of use.
Generally, land-cover does
not coincide with land-use. A land-use is composed of several land covers, for
example, a residential land-use class not only contains built-up class but also
contains vegetation class, water class, etc. Remote sensing data can provide
land cover information rather than land-use information. The properties
measured with remote sensing techniques relate to land-cover, from which land-use can be
inferred, particularly with ancillary data or already known knowledge.
Identifying, delineating, and mapping land-cover is important for global
monitoring studies, resource management, and planning activities.
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