Full text: Resource and environmental monitoring

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se. The 
individual composition of the Vegetation-Soil-Topography- 
Interface (VSTI) of any catchment is resulting in a specific 
environmental potential for the regional development of 
agriculture and forestry, which in turn have subsequent impacts 
on the hydrological, erosion and solute transport dynamics of the 
river catchments. 
Environmental problems resulting from inadequate management 
of agriculture and forestry in Europe must therefore be understood 
as being primarily related to the hydrological transport dynamics 
of river catchments. With respect to the management of water 
resources of an ldealized European Catchment (IEC), such 
environmental problems can be differentiated into: floods, land 
degradation and water pollution. They can only be dealt with, if a 
structured systems approach as shown in Figure | is applied 
integrating different techniques to identify the complex systems 
dynamics. 
2. THEMATIC AND CONCEPTUAL BACKGROUND 
Traditional methods, i.e. field mapping, surveying or soil 
sampling, used at present to derive realistic parameterizations of 
the distributed heterogeneity of the VSTI have obvious 
deficiencies: They provide detailed informations "on the spot" but 
the regionalization of such local informations and measures 
describing their representativeness has still not been resolved yet. 
By combining the classification potential of high resolution Earth 
Observation (EO) data with the powerful spatial anlysis available 
from a Geographic Information System (GIS), a high resolution in 
time and space for heterogeneous VSTIs of river catchments is 
achieved. Such an integration of EO data and GIS will overcome 
the present deficiencies and will provide a toolset for improved 
catchment model parameterization for a sustainable future 
environmental catchment management. 
" 2.1 The Idealized European Catchment (IEC) 
As shown in Figure 2, ARSGISIP will be carried out in various 
mesoscale test catchments selected by the respective national 
Research End User Teams (RETs) and located in different 
climatic zones of Europe. The results obtained from applying the 
methodology of EO and integrated GIS analyses to parameterize 
models applied in these test catchments will support an improved 
> sustainable management of the respective river catchments; 
> insight of the role of catchment heterogeneity as 
conceptualized by the Idealized European Catchment (IEC) 
schematically shown in Figures 1 and 2. 
Each of the test catchments selected by the RETs of ARSGISIP is 
representing a particular composition of physiographic properties 
and management. Both are associated with environmental 
problems, i.e. soil erosion, which are common in the European 
environment of the respective climatic zone. By combining and 
projecting all of these assemblies into the conceptualized IEC, a 
“virtual catchment reality” is generated representative for the 
majority of the European environment and their associated 
> environmental problems related to the water supply and 
catchment management strategies, 
> physiographic catchment properties, to be parameterized for 
prognostive models of hydrological, erosion and solute trans- 
port dynamics, for which the project will deliver 
  
Remote Sensing 
- Topography A 
^ 
- Land degradation AN 
  
  
- Land cover 
  
- Retention areas 
- Properties 
- Hydrology 
- Flood generation mi 
- Erosion dynamics 74 A 
   
- Solute transport (4/53 
- Response Units 
  
Modelling 
  
    
   
   
   
  
  
   
    
GIS Processing 
  
nm E - Spatial distribution 
- Erosion potential 
  
- Stream network 
- Parameterization 
- Environment 
- Water quality 
- Sustainability 
- Flood protection 
- Simulations 
  
  
Figure 1: ARSGISIP's integrated remote sensing approach towards the Idealized European Catchment (IEC) 
Intemational Archives of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing. Vol. XXXII, Part 7, Budapest, 1998 115 
  
  
  
  
 
	        
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