Remote sensing of riparian habitat in the Colorado River delta
"Arid
and semi-arid zone riparian corridors are among the most important
yet threatened natural ecosystems on Earth. They are important because
they provide water, food and migration routes for wildlife in otherwise
dry habitats; they are threatened because diversion of water for
human use and flow-regulation to control flooding have severely
degraded the habitat value of virtually all the world's perennial
dryland rivers (Glenn et al., 2001b, in press)." Riparian corridors
are linear landscape features that connect ecosystems across regions
(Dynesius and Nilsson, 1994). Hence, the deterioration of riparian
habitat may affect populations of migratory species at continental
or even hemispherical scales (Huerta et al., 1999; EDF, 1999). Remote
sensing should be among methods of choice for monitoring riparian
zones, since these corridors stretch over thousands of kilometers,
cross national borders and are difficult to survey on the ground
(Nagler et al., 2001, in press). However, remote sensing and monitoring
for the management of riparian zones has primarily taken place for
the San Pedro watershed (Goodrich et al., 2000a) and the Rio Grande
(Coonrod, 2001).
Measurement of riparian plant cover is an important
tool in evaluating the effectiveness of water conservation practices
in the Colorado River delta and serves to protect biologically diverse
natural resources and habitats for endangered species. Current methods
for measuring plant cover in the delta are difficult due to inaccessibility
in the vast, desert areas, and tedious due to the variability and
number of plant transect surveys required, and also subjective due
to inherent human error. Remote sensing methods for estimating plant
cover have largely replaced manual methods of determining vegetation
percent cover (including other factors such as plant type, height,
and density), but this conversion of methods has primarily been
for non-riparian biomes, such as grasslands, coniferous and deciduous
forests, and agricultural settings. Although remote sensing provides
consistent, large-area coverage of riparian regions, which are difficult
to access by land due to a lack of roads, Huete et al. (1992) state
that the technique in such areas is hampered by large areas of bare
soil, shadowing effects, and nonlinear relationships between the
measured signal and the areal extent and leaf density of shrubs.
They describe the difficulty of making accurate quantification estimates
of percent vegetation cover in semi-arid environments is mostly
due to the effect of bare soil on the measurement of green leaf
area and density (these problems are cited in detail in section
3.3). Furthermore, riparian cooridors have been considered difficult
targets for analysis by satellite imagery because they are narrow
features with complex mixes of vegetation, water and soil.
Although
difficult to access, Glenn et al. (2001) were awarded a NASA Grant
(CARBON-0000-0114) to study carbon cycle science and the biology
and biogeochemistry of ecosystems and applications, specifically
for studying aspects of the delta of the Colorado River in Mexico
using remote sensing. As part of this proposal, Glenn et al. (2001,
NASA application) intend to use ground-, aerial- remote sensing
techniques, and satellite images, to develop vegetation and habitat
maps of the Colorado River delta in Mexico and to model the surface
hydrology of the flood plain and delta in different flood stages.
They proposed using geographically comprehensive data acquisition
strategies at the ground, aerial and satellite levels (e.g., integrating
locational data (i.e, GPS), transect data, ancillary maps at different
spatial and temporal scales in a GIS, laser altimetry, multi-band
digital cameras and radiometers from aircraft, and satellite sensors).
The GIS is in cooperation with the currently used Bureau of Reclamation
(BoR) Lower Colorado Accounting System (LCRAS). The satellite sensors
are the Enhanced Thematic Mapper (ETM+) and the Moderate Resolution
Imaging Spectrometer (MODIS). They will produce the hydrological
model using ground data, historic flow data, laser altimetry from
aircraft (present) and LightSAR from satellite (future), and higher
spatial resolution sensor data to include both ETM+ and MODIS for
comparing flood magnitudes at different scales.
Additionally, the remote sensing plan includes
the analyses of the change in vegetation response (consequence)
to flood flows (cause) (Glenn et al., 2001, NASA application). They
proposed using ground vegetation surveys, historic flood flow event
reports, and vegetation indices from satellite images to determine
not only the extent and magnitude of vegetation change, but also
to create a predictive model of these land-cover, land-use change
dynamics and to make assessments of endangered species habitat.
A remote sensing method to validate the estimate
of water stress and evapo-transpiration of vegetation in the delta
is included in this proposal to NASA. They intend to obtain a water
balance map product using ground-based sap flow meters and sensors
on aircraft and satellites which have visible, near-infrared, and
thermal channels. The objective of this application is to produce
a predictive surface hydrology - vegetation - habitat model that
uses as input flow releases from the United States to Mexico and
has output predictions of extent of vegetation cover and of specific
vegetation units associated with wildlife habitat values (Glenn
et al., 2001, NASA application).
As with many land cover and land use change applications, the remote
sensing component includes an on-going monitoring protocol. In the
delta, this includes monitoring to (i) improve the management of
this semiarid ecosystem for both sustainability and resilience of
the natural resources (i.e., water) and (ii) further the understanding
of the consequences of land-cover and land-use change on habitat
value using remote sensing methods (Glenn et al., 2001, NASA application).
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