The Use of Remote Sensing Data for Drought Assessment and Monitoring in Southwest Asia


Book Description

This report describes the development of the near real-time drought monitoring and reporting system for the region, which currently includes Afghanistan, Pakistan and western parts of India. The system is based on drought-related indices derived from high-resolution remote-sensing data (MODIS). The unique feature of the study is the development of regression relationships between drought-related indices obtained from MODIS and AVHRR data, which have different pixel-resolution and optical characteristics. The goal is to make the system available, via Internet, to all stakeholders in the region.




Remote Sensing of Drought


Book Description

Remote Sensing of Drought: Innovative Monitoring Approaches presents emerging remote sensing-based tools and techniques that can be applied to operational drought monitoring and early warning around the world. The first book to focus on remote sensing and drought monitoring, it brings together a wealth of information that has been scattered throughout the literature and across many disciplines. Featuring contributions by leading scientists, it assembles a cross-section of globally applicable techniques that are currently operational or have potential to be operational in the near future. The book explores a range of applications for monitoring four critical components of the hydrological cycle related to drought: vegetation health, evapotranspiration, soil moisture and groundwater, and precipitation. These applications use remotely sensed optical, thermal, microwave, radar, and gravity data from instruments such as AMSR-E, GOES, GRACE, MERIS, MODIS, and Landsat and implement several advanced modeling and data assimilation techniques. Examples show how to integrate this information into routine drought products. The book also examines the role of satellite remote sensing within traditional drought monitoring, as well as current challenges and future prospects. Improving drought monitoring is becoming increasingly important in addressing a wide range of societal issues, from food security and water scarcity to human health, ecosystem services, and energy production. This unique book surveys innovative remote sensing approaches to provide you with new perspectives on large-area drought monitoring and early warning.




Remote Sensing of Hydrological Extremes


Book Description

This volume provides in-depth coverage of the latest in remote sensing of hydrological extremes: both floods and droughts. The book is divided into two distinct sections – floods and droughts – and offers a variety of techniques for monitoring each. With rapid advances in computer modelling and observing systems, floods and droughts are studied with greater precision today than ever before. Land surface models, especially over the entire Continental United States, can map the hydrological cycle at kilometre and sub-kilometre scales. In the case of smaller areas there is even higher spatial resolution and the only limiting factor is the resolution of input data. In-situ sensors are automated and the data is directly relayed to the world wide web for many hydrological variables such as precipitation, soil moisture, surface temperature and heat fluxes. In addition, satellite remote sensing has advanced to providing twice a day repeat observations at kilometre to ten-kilometre spatial scales. We are at a critical juncture in the study of hydrological extremes, and the GPM and SMAP missions as well as the MODIS and GRACE sensors give us more tools and data than were ever available before. A global variety of chapter authors provides wide-ranging perspectives and case studies that will make this book an indispensable resource for researchers, engineers, and even emergency management and insurance professionals who study and/or manage hydrological extremes.




Review, automated estimation and analyses of drought indices in South Asia


Book Description

This paper reviews the existing indices which have been developed for monitoring and quantitative assessment of droughts, and analyzes their applicability for drought prediction and management in the specific context of South Asia. It further describes the suite of routines, which have been developed for automated estimation, display and analyses of various drought indices. The suite forms part of the comprehensive computer package, developed earlier and designed to perform the multitude of water resources analyses and hydrometeorological data processing. The seven-step procedure of setting up and running a typical drought-assessment application is described in detail.




Drought Assessment


Book Description

Information-based decision-making during drought, often brings out some of the excellent practices that are prevalent in society / individuals. This book is designed to provide information on the drought process, meteorological, hydrological, agriculture, socio-economic aspects and available technologies such as satellite remote sensing data analysis and Geographical Information system for assessment. Assessment procedures utilising the various parameters of importance from various sources for micro level management that would enhance the effectiveness of management practice are dealt in detail. Resource availability and affected group determine the relief assistance for the present event and information that would help them in their realisation and preparedness for the forthcoming years by select countries is highlighted. This would help in the formulation of schemes for event mitigation and area development plans. The readers would gain complete knowledge on drought. This book is expected to act as a guide in preparing people as effective natural resource utilizationist under drought situations.




Remote Sensing of Drought


Book Description

Droughts and floods are water-related natural disasters which distress a broad range of ecological factors and activities related to agriculture, vegetation, human and wild life and local economies. Drought is the solo imperative weather-related natural disaster often aggravated by human action, since it distresses very large areas for months and years and thus has a thoughtful impact on regional food production, life expectancy for entire populations and economic performance of large regions or several countries. Traditional methods of drought assessment and monitoring rely on rainfall data, which are limited in the region, often inaccurate and, most importantly, difficult to obtain in near-real time. In contrast, the satellite-sensor data are consistently available and can be used to detect the onset of drought, its duration and magnitude. Even crop yields can be predicted 5 to 13 weeks prior to harvests using remote-sensing techniques. The need for proper quantification of drought impacts and monitoring and reporting of drought development is of critical importance in politically, economically and environmentally sensitive countries. Remote Sensing of Drought presents cutting-edge remote sensing tools and techniques that can be applied worldwide in order to the relevance of drought to natural hazards and climate change. To assess historical droughts and to provide drought monitoring, various indices have been proposed for different purposes and using different datasets. Despite the display of these indices, when one focuses on the processes that caused droughts, a set of consistent indices may adequately describe the different aspects of the droughts. Remote sensing techniques make it possible to obtain and distribute information rapidly over large areas by means of sensors operating in several spectral bands, mounted on aircraft or satellites. Several users such as top level policy makers at the national and international organizations, researchers, middle level policy makers at the state, province and local levels consultants, relief agencies and local producers including farmers, suppliers, traders and water managers are interested in reliable and accurate drought and flood information for effective management. This novel edition is packed with innovative remote sensing approaches to provide you with new perspectives on large-area drought monitoring and early warning.




Frameworks for Improving Multi-Index Drought Monitoring Using Remote Sensing Observations


Book Description

The overarching goal of this dissertation is to improve current capabilities in drought monitoring using space-based observations, with a focus on integrating remotely sensed data products that are not commonly being used for drought monitoring. The first chapter of this dissertation, surveys current and emerging drought monitoring approaches using remotely-sensed observations from climatological and ecosystem perspectives. Current and future satellite missions offer opportunities to develop composite and multi-sensor (or multi-index) drought assessment models. While there are immense opportunities, there are major challenges including data continuity, unquantified uncertainty, sensor changes, and community acceptability. One of the major limitations of many of the currently available satellite observations is their short length of record. However, they still provide valuable information about relevant hydrologic and ecological processes linked to this natural hazard. Therefore, there is a need for models and algorithms that combine multiple data sets and/or assimilate satellite observations into model simulations to generate long-term climate data records. To address this gap, Chapter 2 introduces Standardized Drought Analysis Toolbox (SDAT), which includes a generalized framework for deriving nonparametric univariate and multivariate standardized drought indices. Current indicators suffer from deficiencies including some prior distributional assumption, temporal inconsistency, and statistical incomparability. Most drought indicators rely on a representative parametric probability distribution function that fits the data. However, a parametric distribution function may not fit the data, especially in continental/global scale studies. Particularly, when the sample size is relatively small as in the case of many satellite precipitation products. SDAT is based on a nonparametric framework that can be applied to different climatic variables including precipitation, soil moisture and relative humidity, without having to assume representative parametric distributions. The most attractive feature of the framework is that it leads to statistically consistent drought indicators based on different variables. We show that using SDAT with satellite observation leads to more reliable drought information, compared to the commonly used parametric methods.We argue that satellite observations not currently used for operational drought monitoring, such as near-surface air relative humidity data from the Atmospheric Infrared Sounder (AIRS) mission, provide opportunities to improve early drought warning. In the third chapter of this dissertation, we outline a new drought monitoring framework for early drought onset detection using AIRS relative humidity data. The early warning and onset detection of drought is of particular importance for effective agriculture and water resource management. Previous studies show that the Standard Precipitation Index (SPI), a measure of precipitation deficit, detects drought onset earlier than other indicators. Here satellite-based near surface air relative humidity data can further improve drought onset detection and early warning. This chapter introduces the Standardized Relative Humidity Index (SRHI) based on the NASA's AIRS observations. SRHI relies on SDAT's nonparametric framework, introduced in Chapter 2. The results indicate that the SRHI typically detects the drought onset earlier than SPI. While the AIRS mission was not originally designed for drought monitoring, its relative humidity data offers a new and unique avenue for drought monitoring and early warning. Early warning aspects of SRHI may have merit for integration into current drought monitoring systems.One of the research opportunities identified in Chapter 1 is using current (and future) satellite missions to develop composite and multi-indicator drought models. In Chapter 4, we outline a framework for assessing impacts of droughts on forest health using a multi-sensor approach. This framework relies on the relationship between climate conditions (e.g., temperature, precipitation, relative humidity, Vapor Pressure Deficit) and forest health based on greenness of vegetation. Wildfires, tree mortality and forest productivity increase during drought periods. Using the proposed multi-index approach, Chapter 4 aims to investigate the effects of recent summer, dry-season and winter droughts on the forest health in western United States. We use Vapor Pressure Deficit (VPD) as an indicator that combines temperature and relative humidity for forest stress assessment. Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) is commonly used for assessing vegetation health. During summer and growing season, VPD values are generally high. The results show that the VPD and NDVI provide consistent information on forest health. In addition to VPD, we use conditional probability of NDVI in high temperature and low relative humidity percentiles over the summer and the growing season. We show that combining temperature and relative humidity using a conditional probability approach offers multi-sensor information on forest condition. During winter, on the other hand, VPD and temperature is relatively lower. NDVI distributions in winter were found to be more associated with precipitation as opposed to relative humidity and temperature. We believe the a joint indicator based on temperature and relative humidity can be considered as a link between climate condition and actual impact on the ecosystem. (Abstract shortened by UMI.)




Remote Sensing for Food Security


Book Description

This volume gathers a variety of applications for remote sensing of vegetation health (VH) and concretely shows how this information can be used in service of ending hunger and of ensuring future food security. In this book’s ten chapters, Dr. Felix Kogan, one of the most prolific scientists in this sphere, shows how a new VH method, designed from operational environmental satellite data, can be used to provide advanced predictions of agricultural losses, helping to enhance food security and reducing the number of hungry people. Topics covered include the scientific basis of the VH method, drought monitoring, prediction of short-term agricultural yield and crop insurance, and impacts of long term climate variability and change on food security. A short discussion on VH for human health-related topics such as detection and prediction of malaria and fire risk is included as well.




Natural and Anthropogenic Disasters


Book Description

The major challenges of the 21st century faced by human beings are how to achieve water security, food security, energy security and environmental security. Owing to enhanced natural/anthropogenic disasters worldwide, these challenges become much more complicated and daunting especially for developing countries. Therefore, it is important to highlight the risk of different disasters as well as the modern tools and techniques for minimizing disaster incidence and losses. Disaster management being highly multidisciplinary in nature, a comprehensive book dealing with different aspects of disaster management, and encompassing important disasters faced by humankind is presently not available. This book is an attempt to fulfill this gap. It provides clear, comprehensive, and up-to-date information about different facets of disaster management along with salient case studies. The book highlights the current status of disaster management focusing on developing nations, discusses vital issues such as climate change and sustainable development, modern approaches and tools/techniques, and the challenges of and future R&D needs for sustainable disaster management.




Recent Advances in Environmental Science from the Euro-Mediterranean and Surrounding Regions


Book Description

This volume includes the papers presented during the 1st Euro-Mediterranean Conference for Environmental Integration (EMCEI) which was held in Sousse, Tunisia in November 2017. This conference was jointly organized by the editorial office of the Euro-Mediterranean Journal for Environmental Integration in Sfax, Tunisia and Springer (MENA Publishing Program) in Germany. It aimed to give a more concrete expression to the Euro-Mediterranean integration process by supplementing existing North-South programs and agreements with a new multilateral scientific forum that emphasizes in particular the vulnerability and proactive remediation of the Euro-Mediterranean region from an environmental point of view. This volume gives a general and brief overview on current research focusing on emerging environmental issues and challenges and its applications to a variety of problems in the Euro-Mediterranean zone and surrounding regions. It contains over five hundred and eighty carefully refereed short contributions to the conference. Topics covered include (1) innovative approaches and methods for environmental sustainability, (2) environmental risk assessment, bioremediation, ecotoxicology, and environmental safety, (3) water resources assessment, planning, protection, and management, (4) environmental engineering and management, (5) natural resources: characterization, assessment, management, and valorization, (6) intelligent techniques in renewable energy (biomass, wind, waste, solar), (7) sustainable management of marine environment and coastal areas, (8) remote sensing and GIS for geo-environmental investigations, (9) environmental impacts of geo/natural hazards (earthquakes, landslides, volcanic, and marine hazards), and (10) the environmental health science (natural and social impacts on Human health). Presenting a wide range of topics and new results, this edited volume will appeal to anyone working in the subject area, including researchers and students interested to learn more about new advances in environmental research initiatives in view of the ever growing environmental degradation in the Euro-Mediterranean region, which has turned environmental and resource protection into an increasingly important issue hampering sustainable development and social welfare.