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Climate Impacts on Sustainable Natural Resource Management


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aids in determining when and how much to irrigate by monitoring the water status of plants. This is done by measuring evapotranspiration rates and by estimating crop coefficients. Efficient use and monitoring of surface water using geospatial techniques have recently attracted the interest of irrigation water policymakers.

      2.2.5 Combating Desertification

      Desertification is an extreme type of condition faced worldwide. Remotely sensed data and geospatial techniques provide important information for assessing desertification and its mapping at a local and global extent. It is a change in land condition that was not desertic into desert type landscapes and is closely linked to factors like population growth, improper farming practices, and widespread crops in naturally fragile environments. It occurs due to a lack of water reserves, humus‐depleted soils, scarce vegetation, and repeated plowing. The consequences of desertification can be dreadful for societies. Geospatial technology is utilized to determine the soil types, vegetation classification, land use classification, and nutrient availability in a region. Integration and weighted overlay of various factors in a GIS system result in vegetation, climate, soil, and management indices. The final product created after superimposing other indices creates a desertification sensitivity index. This index can help assess the stage of desertification of the study area (Lamqadem et al. 2018; Bedoui 2020).

      2.2.6 Biodiversity Management

      Biodiversity monitoring is essential for developing an adequate and timely management plan to safeguard the losses witnessed due to extreme human pressure or other natural causes. The LULC maps can be prepared using remote sensing observations and geospatial tools for understanding the rate of change of one land use category into another. Such assessment helps policymakers in developing plans that are effective in biodiversity conservation and management. This helps to ensure sustainable development and understanding of human activities' effect within and around protected areas. Geospatial data such as aerial and satellite photographs can be used to manage flora and fauna by determining the presence and distribution of vegetation and invasive species within a protected area (Kumar et al. 2019b). It helps in determining the extent of vegetation, water and food availability for animals in different seasons of the year. The animal census is usually assisted nowadays by aerial photographs or camera trap methods, which is again a useful application of geospatial technologies. Geospatial tools can also be used to show the intrusion of humans into protected areas and animal movements outside the protected areas. This is useful in resolving human‐wildlife conflicts. GPS technology can be utilized to monitor the activity of endangered species and protect them from poachers. GIS and remote sensing tools can also be used for conducting environmental impact assessment (EIA) of different projects, including building construction, road construction, pipe ways, dams, etc., within protected areas. Therefore, geospatial data has become essential in biodiversity management practices.

      LiDAR is a remote sensing method in which a pulse of light is used to measure distances. The sensor emits a pulse of light to the earth's surface from an airborne or space‐borne laser for measurement. The technique provides a direct means to measure vegetation canopies' structure (Dubayah and Drake 2000). The pulse bounces off the tree canopy materials such as leaves and branches. The reflected energy is collected back at the instrument. Time taken for the pulse between emission, reflection, and recapture by the instrument is recorded. Various structure metrics are computed, analyzed, or modeled. Different LiDAR systems measure vegetation characteristics, mostly high pulse rate, small‐footprint, first‐ or last‐return‐only airborne systems which fly in the lower altitude region. Other systems are large footprint and full‐waveform digitizing that deliver superior vertical details about the vegetation canopy. Dubayah and Drake (2000) and Lefsky et al. (2002) provided a thorough overview of LiDAR application for land surface characterization and forest studies.

      Remote sensing coupled with artificial intelligence (AI) provides essential technical supports to natural resource monitoring using various applications, including target detection, quantitative extraction of information, change detection and analysis, as well as multi‐source remote sensing information processing (SuperMap 2019).

Schematic illustration of satellite and LiDAR data fusion for natural resource management.

      The technology involving data processing and its optimization from different remote sensing sources can enrich the overall data quality. This technology can further improve the overall strength of the natural resources management process and may include:

      1 LiDAR 3D point cloud processing techniques based on AI can enhance the monitoring data like buildings and terrains and improve natural resource management accuracy.

      2 Optimization of remote sensing image quality using AI can improve the accuracy of image interpretation. Super‐resolution reconstruction and de‐clouding techniques can enhance the image quality and add more value to its use.

      3 Hyperspectral