Remote Sensing of Human-Environment Interactions
A special issue of Remote Sensing (ISSN 2072-4292). This special issue belongs to the section "Environmental Remote Sensing".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 January 2020) | Viewed by 57670
Special Issue Editors
Interests: Dr. Stephen J. Walsh’s research interests involve the fusion of multi-scale remote sensing assets and information extraction methods to assess the spatial-temporal patterns of land cover/land use change (LCLUC) and the associated social-ecological drivers of change. Through extensive work in Thailand, the Ecuadorian Amazon, and the Galapagos Islands of Ecuador, remote sensing data products are integrated with multi-dimensional human-environment data to examine pattern process relationship and the feedbacks between human behavior and environmental dynamics. Scenario testing is conducted to study the impact of exogenous and endogenous factors in shaping and reshaping human-environment interactions and LCLUC patterns that are assessed through statistical methods and spatial simulation models, including, agent-based models and dynamic systems models
Interests: remote sensing of environment; land-cover/land-use change; ecosystem carbon and water exchange with atmosphere; human–environment interactions
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Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
We are calling for papers for a Special Issue on “Remote Sensing of Human-Environment Interactions”. Due to the rapid increase in the global human population, its re-distribution through migration, and associated economic growth, the direct and indirect human footprint on the natural environment has never been larger and it is increasing in areal extent and intensity, seriously threatening the welfare of future generations. Humans are extracting increasingly more resources from the environment, including, but not limited to, unprecedented use of fertile land for urban expansion, agricultural land extensification and intensification for food production, timber harvesting, freshwater usage, and mineral, gas and oil excavation, all of which have profound environmental and social consequences. On the other hand, the waste matter coming out of the human system in solid, liquid or gaseous forms, and entering into the atmosphere and/or water system, further compromises the vital ecosystem services that the natural environment provides and the health and well-being of humans require. At the same time, tremendous efforts have been invested by national and international agencies and government organizations in conservation of the existing vital ecosystems, restoration of the degraded environments, and creative management for sustainable use of key natural resources. Remote Sensing provides an indispensable tool to monitor, visualize, analyze, and model human-environment interactions for better understanding of what has happened in the past and the consequences of the future. Linking geospatial data to remotely sensed data to characterize people, environment, and their interactions is vital to implementing and accomplishing sustainable development involving the integration of policy actors across multiple sectors and levels of government. To stimulate more research on human–environment interactions using remotely sensed data in both the continental and island settings and its international dissemination, we call for papers on a range of topics in this Special Issue, such as
(1) Urban-agricultural land use dynamics and the social-ecological consequences.
(2) Natural resource management programs or environmental policies.
(3) Deforestation and reforestation and other environmental restoration programs.
(4) Mining, fracking and other forms of extraction of underground natural resources.
(5) Social-ecological impacts of tourism and population migration.
(6) Island ecosystems and challenges to their sustainability.
Prof. Stephen J. Walsh
Prof. Conghe Song
Guest Editors
Manuscript Submission Information
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Keywords
- Human-Environment Interactions
- Land-Cover/Land-Use Change
- Ecosystem Services
- Natural Resource Management
- Environmental Policy Evaluation
- Tourism and Development
- Climate and Environmental Change
- Urbanization
- Population Migration
- Land Abandonment
- Land Degradation
- Invasive Species
- Agricultural intensification & Extensification
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