TY - JOUR
T1 - Monitoring Global Croplands with Coarse Resolution Earth Observations
T2 - The Global Agriculture Monitoring (GLAM) Project
AU - Becker-Reshef, Inbal
AU - Justice, Chris
AU - Sullivan, Mark
AU - Vermote, Eric
AU - Tucker, Compton
AU - Anyamba, Assaf
AU - Small, Jen
AU - Pak, Ed
AU - Masuoka, Ed
AU - Schmaltz, Jeff
AU - Hansen, Matthew
AU - Pittman, Kyle
AU - Birkett, Charon
AU - Williams, Derrick
AU - Reynolds, Curt
AU - Doorn, Bradley
PY - 2010/6
Y1 - 2010/6
N2 - In recent years there has been a dramatic increase in the demand for timely, comprehensive global agricultural intelligence. Timely information on global crop production is indispensable for combating the growing stress on the world's crop production and for securing both short-term and long-term stable and reliable supply of food. Global agriculture monitoring systems are critical to providing this kind of intelligence and global earth observations are an essential component of an effective global agricultural monitoring system as they offer timely, objective, global information on croplands distribution, crop development and conditions as the growing season progresses. The Global Agriculture Monitoring Project (GLAM), a joint NASA, USDA, UMD and SDSU initiative, has built a global agricultural monitoring system that provides the USDA Foreign Agricultural Service (FAS) with timely, easily accessible, scientifically-validated remotely-sensed data and derived products as well as data analysis tools, for crop-condition monitoring and production assessment. This system is an integral component of the USDA's FAS Decision Support System (DSS) for agriculture. It has significantly improved the FAS crop analysts' ability to monitor crop conditions, and to quantitatively forecast crop yields through the provision of timely, high-quality global earth observations data in a format customized for FAS alongside a suite of data analysis tools. FAS crop analysts use these satellite data in a 'convergence of evidence' approach with meteorological data, field reports, crop models, attaché reports and local reports. The USDA FAS is currently the only operational provider of timely, objective crop production forecasts at the global scale. These forecasts are routinely used by the other US Federal government agencies as well as by commodity trading companies, farmers, relief agencies and foreign governments. This paper discusses the operational components and new developments of the GLAM monitoring system as well as the future role of earth observations in global agricultural monitoring.
AB - In recent years there has been a dramatic increase in the demand for timely, comprehensive global agricultural intelligence. Timely information on global crop production is indispensable for combating the growing stress on the world's crop production and for securing both short-term and long-term stable and reliable supply of food. Global agriculture monitoring systems are critical to providing this kind of intelligence and global earth observations are an essential component of an effective global agricultural monitoring system as they offer timely, objective, global information on croplands distribution, crop development and conditions as the growing season progresses. The Global Agriculture Monitoring Project (GLAM), a joint NASA, USDA, UMD and SDSU initiative, has built a global agricultural monitoring system that provides the USDA Foreign Agricultural Service (FAS) with timely, easily accessible, scientifically-validated remotely-sensed data and derived products as well as data analysis tools, for crop-condition monitoring and production assessment. This system is an integral component of the USDA's FAS Decision Support System (DSS) for agriculture. It has significantly improved the FAS crop analysts' ability to monitor crop conditions, and to quantitatively forecast crop yields through the provision of timely, high-quality global earth observations data in a format customized for FAS alongside a suite of data analysis tools. FAS crop analysts use these satellite data in a 'convergence of evidence' approach with meteorological data, field reports, crop models, attaché reports and local reports. The USDA FAS is currently the only operational provider of timely, objective crop production forecasts at the global scale. These forecasts are routinely used by the other US Federal government agencies as well as by commodity trading companies, farmers, relief agencies and foreign governments. This paper discusses the operational components and new developments of the GLAM monitoring system as well as the future role of earth observations in global agricultural monitoring.
KW - Agriculture
KW - Croplands
KW - GLAM
KW - MODIS
KW - Monitoring
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84860392830&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.3390/rs2061589
DO - 10.3390/rs2061589
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84860392830
SN - 2072-4292
VL - 2
SP - 1589
EP - 1609
JO - Remote Sensing
JF - Remote Sensing
IS - 6
ER -