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Fig 2: Access to shared water resources information from space by various actors resulting in new
control mechanisms in management
The scientific progress of satellite interpretations has undergone major improvements in the last 10
years. Conversion algorithms between the spectral radiances at the one hand and bio-phyiscal or
hydrological parameters at the other hand have been improved. Some review of progress can be found
in (Engman and Gurney, 1991; Kite and Pietroni, 1996; Rango and Shalaby, 1998; Schultz and
Engman, 2000; Bastiaanssen et al, 2000). Basic research is elementary for improving the accuracy of
estimation procedures, because none of the surface features summarized in Table 2 can be directly
measured. Remote sensing scientists have generally not grasped the need to investigate river basin
processes and dedicated more efforts to climatology and ecology (e.g. Nemani et al., 1996). Driving
the research community is an important asset for the future.
Discipline Application
Hydrology Snow cover, precipitation, soil moisture, evapotranspiration
Agriculture Irrigated area, rainfed area, crop identification, biomass growth, crop yield,
irrigation performance
Environment Forest area, wetlands, rangelands, waterlogging, salinization, water quality
Geography Digital elevation, land slope, land aspects, land cover, land use
Table 2: Satellite measurements for possible applications in national and international river basins
It should be recognized that lots of database building has been realized during the last 10 years.
Several public domain databases on climate, river runoff, land cover and elevation have been
established and are continuously updated. The US Geological Survey has prepared a digital elevation
map of the world with a 1 km spatial resolution, GTOPO30, which is available at the world wide web.
The global land cover map from Eidenshink and Faundeen (1998) has a global 1 km grid. Examples
of finer resolution land cover databases are IGBP-DIS global land cover data set Discover (Loveland
and Belward, 1997), Corine, Pelcom, Africover (FAO) and the Asian Association on Remote Sensing
AARS-Global Land Cover Data Set (Chiba University). Discover only recognizes cropland and no
further breakdown in crops or irrigated agriculture is made as it aims at support global change
modelling. Corine, Africover and AARS are more suited for planning of agricultural development.
444 International Archives of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing. Vol. XXXIII, Part B7. Amsterdam 2000.