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The application of Landsat image data to rangeland assessment and monitoring: An example from South Australia.
Author
Graetz, RD
Gentle, MR
Pech, RP
O'Callaghan, JF
Drewien, G
Publisher
CSIRO Publishing
Publication Year
1983
Body

The potential of Landsat image data to assess and monitor an area of semi-arid rangelands in South Australia is demonstrated. The project is a cooperative ongoing one between CSIRO and a future operational user of Landsat, the South Australian Pastoral Board, and it has as its long-term aim the development of a Land Image-Based Resource Information System (LIBRIS) for rangeland management. Three separate stages of the project are described. The fist is the integration of tenure maps with Landsat image data to permit a useful analysis and interrogation of the combined Landsat data sets. The second is the derivation of vegetation indices from Landsat data that are applicable to the semi-arid rangelands. Indices of 'cover' and of 'greenness' have been derived, but this report concen- trates on the cover index only for it can be related to soil erosion hazard/landscape stability and, as such, it represents a simple, robust vegetation-related index derived directly from Landsat. Lastly this index is used to map both cover and trend (changes in cover). Cover changes over the period 1973-1980 are detected and reported for a test region of 8300 km2. With the integration of tenure boundaries the interrogation, mapping and reporting at the individual property level is demonstrable.

Language
English
Resource Type
Text
Document Type
Journal Issue/Article
Journal Volume
5
Journal Number
2
Collection
Australian Rangelands
Journal Name
The Rangeland Journal