1380 - Identify, download, prepare, and interpret public data sources relevant to forestry, including USDA Agricultural Research Service National Aerial Imagery Program aerial photographs, NRCS SSURGO soils data, USGS digital elevation data, USDA National Agricu

Identify, download, prepare, and interpret public data sources relevant to forestry, including USDA Agricultural Research Service National Aerial Imagery Program aerial photographs, NRCS SSURGO soils data, USGS digital elevation data, USDA National Agricultural Service Crop Data Layer data, USFWS National Wetlands Inventory data, and USGS National Hydrography Dataset streams, rivers, and lakes data.

Topics

  • [DA-016] GIS&T and Forestry

    GIS applications in forestry are as diverse as the subject itself. Many foresters match a common stereotype as loggers and firefighters, but many protect wildlife, manage urban forests, enhance water quality, provide for recreation, and plan for a sustainable future.  A broad range of management goals drives a broad range of spatial methods, from adjacency functions to zonal analysis, from basic field measurements to complex multi-scale modeling. As such, it is impossible to describe the breadth of GIS&T in forestry. This review will cover core ways that geospatial knowledge improves forest management and science, and will focus on supporting core competencies.