• Satellite images can help with environme

    From ScienceDaily@1:317/3 to All on Tue Oct 12 21:30:46 2021
    Satellite images can help with environmental land management

    Date:
    October 12, 2021
    Source:
    University of Surrey
    Summary:
    Academics have undertaken research that proves Earth Observation
    satellite imagery can accurately assess the quality and quantity
    of some habitat types.



    FULL STORY ========================================================================== Academics at the University of Surrey's Centre for Environment and Sustainability have undertaken research that proves Earth Observation
    satellite imagery can accurately assess the quality and quantity of some habitat types.


    ==========================================================================
    This discovery opens up cost-effective routes to monitoring, reporting,
    and verifying land management incentive schemes, such as the Department
    for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs' new Environmental Land Management scheme.

    Environmental land management is a crucial element of adapting to protect communities and natural habitats -- which is a goal of the upcoming UN
    Climate Change Conference in November.

    In March 2021, the UK government announced the scheme as a replacement
    for the EU Common Agricultural Policy to support the rural economy while achieving the goals of the 25 Year Environment Plan and helping to meet
    carbon emission reduction commitments. The scheme will use public money
    to pay farmers and land managers in England to deliver a set of 'public
    goods' that cover clean air, clean and plentiful water, thriving plants
    and wildlife, protection from and mitigation of environmental hazards,
    beauty, heritage and engagement, and mitigation of and adaptation to
    climate change.

    To confirm that their approach has practical application, the University
    of Surrey team worked with ecologists to test the use of satellite
    imagery in establishing habitat criteria for five example species or
    species groups in the Surrey Hills Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty,
    one of the areas in the first set of DEFRA's trials for the Environmental
    Land Management scheme. Two types of butterfly, skylarks, hazel dormice,
    and dragonflies and damselflies were chosen for investigation because
    they act as bio-indicators of appropriate and healthy habitat, both for themselves and in terms of the wider ecosystem. They also represent
    a range of habitat needs such as chalk grassland, woodland, pasture,
    arable land, hedgerows and inland water.

    Ecologists from the Surrey Wildlife Trust and Butterfly Conservation
    advised the research team and helped them build knowledge of the habitat requirements for each species. The team then used both readily available
    and very high- resolution Earth Observation resources to evaluate
    broad habitat suitability and connectivity for the species and assign
    a suitability score. Finally, they used the score and local expert
    knowledge to explore the additional contribution of the increasingly
    available Very High Resolution (VHR) Earth Observation data (0.7-4 m in
    this study) for habitat assessment.

    The team found that they could use Earth Observation data effectively to evaluate habitats, including through automatic recognition and mapping,
    which will be essential in running the government's new scheme. For
    example, they could check if skylark nesting sites were left uncut during
    the breeding season. They also identified ways of using the information
    from satellite images to identify simple ways to improve land management,
    for example, areas that could happily host butterfly populations if
    specific plant seeds were dispersed and areas where particular care
    against fertiliser spray drift is needed.

    Professor Richard Murphy of the Centre for Environment and Sustainability
    and leader of the University's Space-4-Sustainability initiative under
    the Sustainability Research Theme, said: "Our team and, in particular,
    the excellent work by NERC SCENARIO Surrey PhD student Ana Andries have
    shown how it is possible to balance the level of detail available from satellite imagery with the level of scrutiny required for an accurate evaluation of habitat in sustainable land management. When coupled
    with expert knowledge of the habitat needs for specific species,
    Earth Observation data is really valuable, especially at Very High
    Resolution, or VHR. This technology has huge potential to enhance
    environmental protection and improvement, not only in the Surrey
    Hills but, with expert input, across England, the UK and globally." ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by University_of_Surrey. Note: Content
    may be edited for style and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Ana Andries, Richard J. Murphy, Stephen Morse, Jim Lynch. Earth
    Observation for Monitoring, Reporting, and Verification within
    Environmental Land Management Policy. Sustainability, 2021; 13
    (16): 9105 DOI: 10.3390/su13169105 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2021/10/211012091852.htm

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