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File: Ecology Pdf 161299 | Casestudy Gisandlandscape
environmental case study gis and landscape ecology landscape ecology investigates spatial processes and patterns in ecological systems such as habitat fragmentation landscape diversity and the effects of surrounding land uses ...

icon picture PDF Filetype PDF | Posted on 21 Jan 2023 | 2 years ago
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                   Environmental Case Study 
                   GIS and Landscape Ecology 
                    
                    
                   Landscape ecology investigates spatial processes and patterns in ecological systems, 
                   such as habitat fragmentation, landscape diversity, and the effects of surrounding land 
                   uses on waterways. How can we identify and monitor those processes and patterns? 
                   Geographic information systems (GIS) are an important tool for investigating spatial 
                   questions in ecology. 
                          What is a GIS? It is software that makes maps from spatial data. Spatial data might 
                   be elevation data, locations of animal observations, or boundaries of habitat areas. By 
                   mapping these data, scientists can investigate relationships among them. You may 
                   have used a GIS: Online mapping services such as MapQuest use digital data 
                   representing roads, cities, landmarks, and addresses to make maps on demand. You 
                   might make a map showing the distance, direction, and driving routes between your 
                   location and a destination. An ecologist would use GIS to show the number of animal 
                   observations in a habitat type, to measure the mean size of habitat fragments, or to 
                   monitor movements of animals among habitat patches. 
                          Landscape ecologists are often explicitly interested in human roles in ecological 
                   systems. The Baltimore Ecosystem Study (BES) is a multidisciplinary landscape 
                   ecology project aimed at understanding how human-dominated ecosystems differ from, 
                   and are similar to, natural ecosystems. Using a watershed in Baltimore, Maryland, 
                   researchers have mapped and measured the effects of settlement density on 
                   biodiversity, water quality, wetland habitats, and other environmental conditions. 
                          In one study, BES researchers mapped suburban, urban, and undeveloped areas 
                   in subwatersheds, then calculated fertilizer inputs to streams from each type of land 
                   use. Fertilizer is important because excess nutrients, especially nitrogen and 
                   phosphorus, are important pollutants in river systems. By mapping elevations, they 
                   could calculate slopes in sub-watersheds; using digital maps of land cover, scientists 
                   could measure the amount of impervious (paved or built) surfaces, then calculate the 
                   rate and volume of storm runoff from streets to waterways. Contrary to expectations, 
                   they are finding that urban neighborhoods introduce significantly less nitrogen into 
                   streams than suburbs do. In some cases, urban nutrient inputs are not much greater 
                   than those from an undisturbed forest. Sediment runoff (such as sand and silt) is greater 
                   in urban areas, though, leading to faster erosion of streambeds and destabilization of 
                   stream-side vegetation. 
                                                                                 
                                  Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. 
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                   Environmental Case Study 
                   GIS and Landscape Ecology 
                    
                    
                                                                                                                 
                          There is growing interest in how landscape features and landscape diversity affect 
                   ecosystems such as the streams in Baltimore. GIS data recording land uses around 
                   stream reaches were central to this study. Many other questions about the interaction of 
                   features in landscapes, and the effects of human developments on natural processes, 
                   are best answered with GIS data. 
                                                                                 
                                  Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. 
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