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Library Estimation of late twentieth century land-cover change in California

Estimation of late twentieth century land-cover change in California

Estimation of late twentieth century land-cover change in California

Resource information

Date of publication
December 2011
Resource Language
ISBN / Resource ID
AGRIS:US201301926746
Pages
251-266

We present the first comprehensive multi-temporal analysis of land-cover change for California across its major ecological regions and primary land-cover types. Recently completed satellite-based estimates of land-cover and land-use change information for large portions of the United States allow for consistent measurement and comparison across heterogeneous landscapes. Landsat data were employed within a pure-panel stratified one-stage cluster sample to estimate and characterize land-cover change for 1973-2000. Results indicate anthropogenic and natural disturbances, such as forest cutting and fire, were the dominant changes, followed by large fluctuations between agriculture and rangelands. Contrary to common perception, agriculture remained relatively stable over the 27-year period with an estimated loss of 1.0% of agricultural land. The largest net declines occurred in the grasslands/shrubs class at 5,131 km² and forest class at 4,722 km². Developed lands increased by 37.6%, composing an estimated 4.2% of the state's land cover by 2000.

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Authors and Publishers

Author(s), editor(s), contributor(s)

Sleeter, Benjamin M.
Wilson, Tamara S.
Soulard, Christopher E.
Liu, Jinxun

Publisher(s)
Data Provider
Geographical focus