March 2004
GLCF participates in Tech2004
The Global Land Cover Facility participated in the Tech2004 forum on March
19. Tech2004 is 'a showcase of electrical engineering, computing and systems
research at the University of Maryland'. At this well attended event, the
GLCF development team presented current research into data grids,
interoperability, and off-site processing of large Earth Science datasets.
Paraguay land cover research results presented at AAG
The Global Land Cover Facility presented research results at the 100th
annual meeting of the Association of American Geographers, in Philadelphia,
on March 19. The GLCF science team presented a paper titled "Subtropical
Deforestation: Paraguay in the 1990s". This was held in the paper session on
"Remote Sensing Forest Issues". The abstract is:
"Deforestation has significant impacts on soil erosion, watershed hydrology,
local climate, biodiversity, and is a key component in atmospheric carbon
models. Remote sensing data from the Landsat series of satellites has been
used to successfully identify and map deforestation in tropical forests. In
this study, data from Landsat 5 and Landsat 7 were used to map deforestation
in the subtropical forests of Paraguay for the decade of 1990 - 2000.
The Rio Paraguay bisects the Republic of Paraguay into two distinct
ecological regions. West of the river are dry deciduous woodlands on the
alluvial plains of the Gran Chaco. Although the Chaco is sparsely populated,
recent large scale conversion of forest to agriculture has occurred in the
vicinity of established Mennonite settlements. East of the Rio Paraguay,
where most of the Paraguayan population resides, are remnants of the humid
Interior Atlantic Forest. This biologically diverse forest that once covered
85% of eastern Paraguay has been reduced to a quarter of its original area
by timber harvesting, conversion to agriculture and encroachment by rural
settlements. This study examines the extent, patterns, causes and impacts of
deforestation in these two very different forested biomes."