Projects

Earth Observation Data to support environmental justice; Linking non-permitted Poultry Operations to environmental vulnerability indices

Industrial agriculture disproportionately affects minority, low-income, and Tribal communities, propagating environmental injustice. Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations (CAFOs) apply massive amounts of untreated waste to nearby farmlands. Even though the environmental health impacts of CAFOs are well documented, most studies rely almost exclusively on known CAFO locations from public records, which are incomplete.

Quantifying the contribution of small and highly dynamic water bodies to methane emissions

To address the limitations of accurately mapping small artificial water bodies and quantifying their contribution to CH4 emissions, the overarching aim of this proposal is to provide better annual regional CH4 flux estimates from inland waters of the Southeastern US by constraining the spatial and temporal dynamics of small water bodies.

Global Flood Mapping with Multi-Sensor Fusion

Floods are the most signifigant climate change-related hazards in terms of life loss and economic damage. Effective and immediate disaster response management can reduce the impact of floods, but it requires near real-time information on flood occurrence, typically derived based on Earth Observation data. Our work has applied machine learning algorithms to map floods globally. We also showed that we can detect more ephemeral flooding events when using data from three sensors provided by NASA’s Harmonized Landsat-Sentinel 2 data product, HLS.

Small Water Body Dynamics

Fresh water stored by small on-farm reservoirs (SRs), which are small water bodies, is a fundamental component of surface hydrology and is critical for meeting global irrigation needs. Farmers use SRs to store water during the wet season for crop irrigation during the dry season. SRs can also contribute to downstream water stress by decreasing stream discharge and peak flow in the watersheds where they are built. There are more than 2.6 million SRs in the US alone, and many SRs were constructed during the last 40 years. Despite their importance for crop irrigation, SRs are poorly quantified bc (1) they are small (

The Effects of Climate and Human Drivers on Changes in Surface Water in the Southeastern United States

Water stress is a global concern as a changing climate leads to variations in weather patterns and agricultural and urban areas continue to use water-intensive practices. Understanding spatial and temporal factors of surface water dynamics is key to better managing our resources and limiting the effects of water stress. However, many of the models we currently have for estimating changes in surface water do not account for human drivers such as land cover change or land use intensity. In this study, we assessed how different climate and anthropogenic drivers affect the variability of surface water in the Southeastern United States, an area that has experienced more land cover change than any other region in the country.

Building Trust in Reidsville GA Through Residential Green Infrastructure

Reidsville GA Community Floods, a small community group, seeks to prevent residential flooding in Reidsville, GA. This community science project will help residents understand their flood risks and the potential for green infrastructure as a step toward this greater goal. In parallel with the group’s existing partnerships that are investigating county-level flooding, the outcomes of this project are to 1) create a map that outlines flood risk in the community 2) better understand the potential for green infrastructure, including replicable green infrastructure on private property.

A Novel Approach for Assessing Environmental Flows Using Satellite Data

We integrated analyzing time-series of satellite and hydro-climatic data to quantify flooding, surface water, and their drivers of change and vegetation response to flooding across Australia’s breadbasket, the Murray-Darling Basin (MDB), a large (1 million km2) dryland basin the size of the U.S. 4 corner states from 1986 to 2011. The three decades investigated represented a period of extreme hydroclimatic variability, including the Millennium Drought (1999-2009), the worst drought recorded for southeastern Australia, followed by some of the wettest years on record (2010-11 La Niña years).

Surface Water and Connectivity Dynamics in a Global Biodiversity Hotspot

Located in the southwest of Western Australia, the Swan Coastal Plain (SCP) is a global biodiversity hotspot with over 1,500 wetlands. More than 70% of the wetlands have been lost since European settlement. The SCP is located in an area affected by recent climate change that also experiences rapid urban development, as the city of Perth has been expanding over time, so has ground water abstraction for urban consumption. We used Landsat TM and ETM+ imagery from 1999 to 2011 to automatically derive a spatially and temporally explicit time-series of surface water body extent on the SCP based on decision trees. We provided the first spatio-temporally dynamic map of the water bodies of the SCP.

Water Resources in a Changing Climate

Climate and land use change act synergistically to affect scarce water resources, already under enormous pressure in Australia. This cross-disciplinary project aimed to quantify the climate-driven variability and impact of climate and land use change on surface water dynamics and connectivity. This research took a holistic approach integrating remote sensing and climate data, land use science, graph theory, and spatial statistics. The project focused on one of largest dryland basins in the world (the size of the four corner states), Australia’s Murray-Darling Basin (MDB).