Requirements
for ground-, aerial-, and satellite-based remote sensing, image
processing, and classification techniques for surveys of the Colorado
River delta.
Biological
diversity is the variety and variability among living organisms
and the environments in which they occur; it is recognized at genetic,
species, ecosystem, and often landscape levels of organization.
Biodiversity is linked to the persistent health and vigor of the
biosphere, so that biodiversity is not only recognized as an indicator
of the condition of the global environment, but also as a regulator
of ecosystem functioning (Solbrig, 1991). A common goal of the researchers
in the delta area is to interpret the spatial patterns of vegetation
communities and their relationship to broad ecological patterns.
Scale is an important feature of biodiversity and how species richness
can be measured in complex ecosystems. A continuum of species richness
exists across broad geographic gradients, along environmental gradients
between communities within a landscape, and between micro gradients
or pattern diversity that measures the change in composition between
points within a community (Whittaker, 1977). Remote sensing and
field census are the basic methods to collect, model, and map species
richness across this array of ecological dimensions.
Issues
and concerns with remote sensing measurements, classification of
riparian habitat, and image processing
The
issues related to using remote sensing techniques to measure and
map riparian habitat, concerns with having a common system for land
cover classification, and probles wth aerial-image processing (georectification,
georeferencing, and mosaicking) are discussed. First, ground-work
to collect biological data on the Colorado River delta is certainly
time-consuming and difficult; remote sensing tools can provide broader
coverage in a more timely, accurate manner. However, ground studies
are still needed, and in the desert, these are difficult due to
the vastness of the area, the severe climate and the lack of roads.
U.S. scientists do not have routine access to the study area, but
the entire ecoregion is dependent on flows of water released from
the United States to Mexico. It is important that both nations have
a common database from which to work, as one of the main problems
has been matching differently scaled, transborder map data.
Remote sensing methods could be used to resolve
some of the technical issues surrounding the delta so that all sides
at least have a common database from which each information layer
is available from a GIS. The next problem to be addressed is that
people do not necessarily agree on the landscape classifications,
as it is a continuum of vegetation types and ecological communities
that is arbitrarily divided by people with opposing perspectives.
Finding a uniform method of mapping the vegetation in the biome
such that descriptions and what was measured in each classification
fit the overall purpose for each interested party.
Aerial surveys of the delta have been somewhat
problematic in that critical target areas have been missed (plane
not over the target), sensors have failed (the high temperatures
in the plane have caused shorts in the equipment), images are difficult
or impossible to georeference (not flying flat (pitch, roll) or
north (off-transect) or the tilting of plane has caused distortion
in the images), and thus, the quality of the georectification and
mosaicking of the images is decreased.
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