Monitoring Environmental Impacts and Ecological Processes with GIS and Remotely-Sensed Data
A special issue of Remote Sensing (ISSN 2072-4292). This special issue belongs to the section "Remote Sensing in Geology, Geomorphology and Hydrology".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 December 2023) | Viewed by 7733
Special Issue Editors
Interests: EO data calibration and processing; land surface phenology; land degradation; RS in forestry and natural resource management; RS in ecology and conservation; EO data integration
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Interests: meteorology; environment; evapotranspiration; climate science; atmospheric physics; climate variability; climate modeling; climate dynamics; ecology; atmospheric pollution
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
The great growth of Earth observation (EO) systems together with innovative data processing and analysis solutions provide opportunities to monitor spatial–temporal changes and to evaluate the effects of human impact and climate modification on the environment and ecological processes as never before. New sensors on different platforms (e.g., GEDI on ISS, PRISMA, AHSI-Gaofen5, and TROPOMI-S5 on satellites, micro Hyper and LiDAR instruments on UAVs) make available more detailed information (higher spectral, spatial, and temporal resolutions) and a greater number of parameters. At the same time, analysis methods based on artificial intelligence techniques, such as machine and deep learning, and reasoning in conditions of uncertainty, are supporting the exploitation of the large heritage of time series of EO data (e.g., Landsat, AVHRR, SEVIRI, Spot, MODIS) acquired in the past to understand and interpret complex processes.
This Special Issue aims to summarize the state of applications and evaluate the trends of EO data acquisition and geospatial processing systems, deepening the knowledge of emerging platforms and techniques in the studies of environmental quality and ecological processes.
Topics in this Special Issue include research and innovative methods for assessing quality in environmental matrices (soil, water, vegetation, and air) and a better understanding of ecological and environmental interactions to support the development of sustainable solutions.
- Spatial-temporal changes in environmental and ecological processes.
- Pollutions/contaminants in environmental matrices (soil, water, vegetation, air).
- EO Essential Variables (Essential Biodiversity Variables—EBV, Essential Climate Variables—ECV, Essential Geodiversity Variables—EGV, Essential Water Variables—EWV, and Essential Ocean Variables—EOV).
- Biodiversity (species, habitat and distribution mapping, distribution models).
- Landscape patterns, processes and interactions.
- Application of passive and active EO data, imaging spectroscopy and other emerging techniques.
- Next generation EO sensors and products for environment and ecosystem monitoring (PACE, SBG, CHIME, LSTM, CO2M).
- GIS and EO for resource management tools and Decision Support Systems (integration models, geospatial artificial intelligence—GeoAI, etc.).
Dr. Tiziana Simoniello
Dr. Gabriel Brito Costa
Guest Editors
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Keywords
- ecosystem processes
- landscape ecology
- spatial data
- remote sensing imagery
- biodiversity monitoring
- environmental quality
- EO essential variables
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