Science Inventory

ESTIMATING IMPERVIOUS COVER FROM REGIONALLY AVAILABLE DATA

Citation:

Bird, S L., L R. Exum, S. W. Alberty, AND C. Perkins. ESTIMATING IMPERVIOUS COVER FROM REGIONALLY AVAILABLE DATA. Presented at US Environmental Protection Agency Regional Vulnerability Assessment Workshop, Research Triangle Park, NC, October 29-30, 2001.

Impact/Purpose:

The distribution and patterns of exposure of ecosystems to stressors over the next 50 years required within the Regional Vulnerability Assessment Program (ReVA) will be dependent on patterns of human activities that are likely to occur over this period. Although human activity and culture are the driving force currently altering the ecological landscape, surprisingly little effort has been devoted to integrating socioeconomic data and projections into environmental and ecological impact assessments. The most dramatic land use change is the conversion of agricultural and forested use to a developed use (residential/commercial). A rapidly-growing population and sprawling, low-density development patterns are consuming large quantities of land. This project is developing methods to analyze potential land use changes that result from changes in human population growth, economic conditions, public works, and public policy decisions. The focus is on developing methods that are appropriate for a region-wide assessment scale. The assessment question addressed is "how much, where, and what kind of land use change will affect ecological resources in a region over the next 25 to 50 years."

Description:

The objective of this study is to compare and evaluate the reliability of different approaches for estimating impervious cover including three empirical formulations for estimating impervious cover from population density data, estimation from categorized land cover data, and to explore the value of basing estimation techniques on a combination of data sources.

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( PRESENTATION/ ABSTRACT)
Product Published Date:10/29/2001
Record Last Revised:06/06/2005
Record ID: 60406