The ability of remote-sensing technologies to rapidly deliver data on habitat quantity (e.g., amount, configuration) and quality (e.g., structure, distribution of individual plant species, habitat types and/or communities, persistence) across a range of spatial resolutions and temporal frequencies is increasingly sought-after in conservation management. However, several problematic issues (e.g., imagery correction and registration, image interpretation, habitat type and quality definitions, assessment and monitoring procedures, uncertainties inherent in mapping, expert knowledge integration, scale selection, analysis of the interrelationships between habitat quality and landscape structure) challenge the effective and reliable use of such data and techniques. We discuss these issues, as a contribution to the development of a common language, framework and suite of research approaches among ecologists, remote-sensing experts and stakeholders (conservation managers) on the ground, and highlight recent theoretical and applied advances that provide opportunities for meeting these challenges. Reconciling differing stakeholder perspectives and needs will boost the timely provisioning of reliable information on the current and changing distribution of biodiversity to enable effective conservation management.

Challenges and opportunities in harnessing satellite remote-sensing for biodiversity monitoring

Cristina Tarantino
2015

Abstract

The ability of remote-sensing technologies to rapidly deliver data on habitat quantity (e.g., amount, configuration) and quality (e.g., structure, distribution of individual plant species, habitat types and/or communities, persistence) across a range of spatial resolutions and temporal frequencies is increasingly sought-after in conservation management. However, several problematic issues (e.g., imagery correction and registration, image interpretation, habitat type and quality definitions, assessment and monitoring procedures, uncertainties inherent in mapping, expert knowledge integration, scale selection, analysis of the interrelationships between habitat quality and landscape structure) challenge the effective and reliable use of such data and techniques. We discuss these issues, as a contribution to the development of a common language, framework and suite of research approaches among ecologists, remote-sensing experts and stakeholders (conservation managers) on the ground, and highlight recent theoretical and applied advances that provide opportunities for meeting these challenges. Reconciling differing stakeholder perspectives and needs will boost the timely provisioning of reliable information on the current and changing distribution of biodiversity to enable effective conservation management.
2015
Istituto per il Rilevamento Elettromagnetico dell'Ambiente - IREA
Istituto di Studi sui Sistemi Intelligenti per l'Automazione - ISSIA - Sede Bari
Inglese
30
207
214
8
Sì, ma tipo non specificato
Habitat quality; Imagery correction and registration; Expert knowledge; Uncertainties; Space-time scales; Context dependence
2
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
262
Paola Mairota; Barbara Cafarelli; Raphael K. Didham; Francesco P. Lovergine; Richard M. Lucas; Harini Nagendra; Duccio Rocchini; Cristina Tarantino...espandi
01 Contributo su Rivista::01.01 Articolo in rivista
none
   BIOdiversity Multi-Source Monitoring System: from Space TO Species
   BIO_SOS
   FP7
   263435
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/297881
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