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Issuesland coverLandLibrary Resource
There are 2, 238 content items of different types and languages related to land cover on the Land Portal.
Displaying 169 - 180 of 2218

Landscape Prediction and Mapping of Game Fish Biomass, an Ecosystem Service of Michigan Rivers

Journal Articles & Books
December, 2015

The increased integration of ecosystem service concepts into natural resource management places renewed emphasis on prediction and mapping of fish biomass as a major provisioning service of rivers. The goals of this study were to predict and map patterns of fish biomass as a proxy for the availability of catchable fish for anglers in rivers and to identify the strongest landscape constraints on fish productivity.

Runoff Trends Driven by Climate and Afforestation in a Pyrenean Basin

Journal Articles & Books
December, 2016

The abandonment of traditional rural life in mountain areas has favoured the expansion of forest in the headwaters of Pyrenean rivers. In this paper, we (i) analyse hydro‐climatic trends at the annual and monthly scales in three nested sub‐catchments in a central Pyrenean basin and (ii) quantify the relative contribution of climate change and forest cover on the observed changes in runoff. Land use maps indicate an increase in the forest cover in all sub‐basins for the period 1987–2009.

36year trends in dissolved organic carbon export from Finnish rivers to the Baltic Sea

Journal Articles & Books
December, 2012
Finland

Increasing dissolved organic carbon (DOC) concentrations in lakes, rivers and streams in northern mid latitudes have been widely reported during the last two decades, but relatively few studies have dealt with trends in DOC export. We studied the export of DOC from Finnish rivers to the Baltic Sea between 1975 and 2010, and estimated trends in DOC fluxes (both flow normalised and non-normalised). The study encompassed the whole Finnish Baltic Sea catchment area (301,000km²) covering major land use patterns in the boreal zone.

possible contribution of agricultural crop residues to renewable energy targets in Europe: A spatially explicit study

Journal Articles & Books
December, 2013
Europe

This paper provides a geographical assessment of potential bioenergy production in the European Union from residues of eight agricultural crops (wheat, barley, rye, oat, maize, rice, rapeseed and sunflower). The evaluation is geographically explicit at the scale of 1km² and is based on two main computational steps. In the first step the amount of crop residues resulting from statistical assessment based on the methodology developed by Scarlat et al.

Influences on the spatial pattern of soil carbon and nitrogen in forested and non-forested riparian zones in the Atlantic Coastal Plain of the Delaware River Basin

Journal Articles & Books
December, 2013

This study investigated the landscape characteristics that influence C and N in unsaturated surface soils of riparian zones along 1st to 3rd order streams in the Atlantic Coastal Plain of the Delaware River Basin. Unsaturated surface soils (0–30cm) were sampled in forested and non-forested sites at 29 locations throughout S New Jersey and SE Pennsylvania. Overall, the soil %C and %N in forested and non-forested riparian sites studied in this investigation were comparable to similar riparian zone soils in eastern North America.

Mean shift-based clustering of remotely sensed data with agricultural and land-cover applications

Journal Articles & Books
December, 2013

The mean shift (MS) algorithm is based on a statistical approach to the clustering problem. Specifically, the method is a variant of density estimation. We revisit in this article the MS paradigm and its use for clustering of remotely sensed images. Specifically, we investigate further the classification accuracy of remotely sensed images as a function of various MS parameters, such as the variant used, kernel type, dimensionality, kernel bandwidth, etc.

SWAT plant growth modification for improved modeling of perennial vegetation in the tropics

Journal Articles & Books
December, 2013

The Soil and Water Assessment Tool (SWAT) has been used for assessing the impact of land cover and land management changes on water resources for a wide range of scales and environmental conditions across the globe. However, originally designed for temperate regions, SWAT must be critically examined for its appropriate use in tropical watersheds. One major concern is the simulation of perennial tropical vegetation due to the absence of dormancy.

Implications of genetics and current protected areas for conservation of 5 endangered primates in China

Journal Articles & Books
December, 2015
China

Most of China's 24–28 primate species are threatened with extinction. Habitat reduction and fragmentation are perhaps the greatest threats. We used published data from a conservation genetics study of 5 endangered primates in China (Rhinopithecus roxellana, R. bieti, R. brelichi, Trachypithecus francoisi, and T. leucocephalus); distribution data on these species; and the distribution, area, and location of protected areas to inform conservation strategies for these primates. All 5 species were separated into subpopulations with unique genetic components.

SAC-SMA a priori parameter differences and their impact on distributed hydrologic model simulations

Journal Articles & Books
December, 2012
United States of America

Deriving a priori gridded parameters is an important step in the development and deployment of an operational distributed hydrologic model. Accurate a priori parameters can reduce the manual calibration effort and/or speed up the automatic calibration process, reduce calibration uncertainty, and provide valuable information at ungauged locations. Underpinned by reasonable parameter data sets, distributed hydrologic modeling can help improve water resource and flood and flash flood forecasting capabilities.

Hydrologic changes resulting from urban cover in seasonally snow‐covered catchments

Journal Articles & Books
December, 2015
Canada

There are few multibasin analyses of the effects of urban land cover on seasonal stream flow patterns within northern watersheds where winter snow cover is the norm. In this study, the effects of urban cover on stream flow were evaluated at nine catchments in southern Ontario, Canada, which vary greatly in urban impervious cover (1–84%) but cluster into two groups having ≥54% urban impervious area (‘urban’) and ≤11% impervious cover (‘rural’), respectively.

high-resolution GIS null model of potential forest expansion following land use changes in Norway

Journal Articles & Books
December, 2013
Norway

During recent decades, forests have expanded into new areas throughout the whole of Norway. The processes explained as causing the forest expansion have focused mainly on climate or land use changes. To enable a spatially explicit separation of the effects following these two main drivers behind forest expansion, the authors set out to model the potential for natural forest regeneration following land use abandonment, given the present climatic conditions.

Detection of sensitive soil properties related to non-point phosphorus pollution by integrated models of SEDD and PLOAD

Journal Articles & Books
December, 2016
China

Effectively identifying soil properties in relation to non-point source (NPS) phosphorus pollution is important for NPS pollution management. Previous studies have focused on particulate P loads in relation to agricultural non-point source pollution. In areas undergoing rapid urbanization, dissolved P loads may be important with respect to conditions of surface infiltration and rainfall runoff. The present study developed an integrated model for the analysis of both dissolved P and particulate P loads, applied to the Meiliang Bay watershed, Taihu Lake, China.