Assessing Eastern North
America Forest Disturbance and Regrowth: Potential from Passive Optical Remote Sensing
Evaluated in the US Mid-Atlantic Region
Samuel N. Goward, Jeffrey Masek (GSFC),
Warren Cohen (USFS Corvallis)
This project is developing advanced procedures to monitor forest-cover
change, disturbance, and recovery. Funded by NASA’s Ecosystems Program, this
project is evaluating potential approaches to forest monitoring using passive
optical satellite remote sensing observations (e.g. Landsat, MODIS and IKONOS
observations). The study is a prototype
effort that supports the goals of the US interagency North American Carbon
Program (NACP). Forest-cover change
is defined as permanent conversion in the type or extent of forest, while
disturbance is defined as transient reduction in forest biomass followed by
a recovery period. Either process
may be of natural or human origin.
The intended outcome of this research is a validated set of techniques
for using passive optical remote sensing to provide measurements of forest
dynamics needed to accomplish the NACP goals.
The project will provide the first paired comparison of multi-temporal
satellite measurements with US Department of Agriculture Forest Service forest inventory and analysis (FIA)
field observations. The study is
directed toward finding means to combine the USDA FS FIA measurements with
remotely sensed data to assess forest dynamics, while not breaching the
confidentiality of the FIA plot measurements.
These efforts began in March 2003 with the intent of assisting the
implementation of the NACP which is anticipated to take place in 2005.
Example publication:
Masek, J., Williams, D.L., Goward, S.N., and Sun, Q. (2004) “The Spectral
evolution of re-growing, Mid-Latitude forests.” Remote Sensing of
Environment.