occurred. Near-infrared Channel 2 reflectivity
increases in value with increased plant leaf area
and then drops dramatically after plant maturity. The
difference between Channels 2 and 1 provides a
measure or signature of plant vigor that scientists
can use in assessing crop conditions. After the peak
period in the plant growing cycle has been reached,
total biomass decreases and the difference in the
values of Channel 2 and 1 dramatically decline.
AVHRR vegetation indices provide a quick
discriminatory visual aid in assessing worldwide
crop conditions.
The interpretation of visible and near infrared
radiation can be improved through the assignment of
colors to Channels 1 and 2. The color coordinate
system provides the assessor with mechanism to
transfer AVHRR data to color graphics. The status of
crops can be determined over time by using one of
several crop indices as the primary coordinate. The
color coordinate system enhances the interpretation
of spectral responses of plants and allows the
analyst to measure the areal extent of drought or
crop stress. A profile of vegetation reflectance over
time can be constructed for disaster-stricken areas.
This profile can be compared with the profile of the
same area for earlier years to provide an historical
measure of impact, the point in the life cycle of the
crop in which the disaster occurred, and the
potential impact on yield (1).
During 1983 NOAA and the Agency for International
Development (AID) sponsored a workshop on Climatic
Impact Assessments for Agriculture at the Asian
Institute of Technology in Bangkok, Thailand. The
workshop led to 1983 test assessment programs
(Indonesia, Philippines, and Thailand) and an
expanded program in South Asia (Pakistan, India,
Nepal, and Malaysia). A Senior Experts Seminar on
Drought Impact Assessment and Food Security was held
in Bangkok, Thailand, January 1984. Policy-level
managers for food security attended the seminar and
prepared country plans that included training and
technical assistance for test assessment using ground
station and satellite data.
Expanded capabilities of microcomputers have
enhanced training in satellite applications in the
developing world. In 1985, the agricultural
assessments program will be expanded using
microcomputers in Southeast Asia. Future assessment
areas include: Equatorial West Africa, the Middle
East, South Pacific, Mexico, and South America (N.E.
Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay). AISC has trained more
than 76 foreign scientists and managers. Training
has included scientists from Haiti, South America,
EL Salvador, Belize, Costa Rica, Colombia, Venezuela,
Ecuador, and Peru; Africa from Senegal, Sierra Leone,
Ethiopia, Niger; and in Asia from Pakistan, India,
Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Burma, Thailand,
Malaysia, Indonesia, Philippines and Singapore.
Training sets using recently developed satellite ima
gery techniques have been developed for the African
Sahel and Southeast Asia. These assessments will be
displayed on personal computers in 1985 for training
purposes. Plans for training programs in AISC in 1985
focus on improving agroclimatic assessments through
use of satellite imagery on microcomputers and
expanded geographic coverage in West Africa, the
Sahel, and South America.
AFRICA: A CASE STUDY
Monitoring the condition of agricultural resources
in the tropics is a new application of meteorological
satellite data. Drought, a natural disaster, expands
over vast areas and lasts for months to even years.
It is the principal weather related disaster facing
most of the world's developing countries. Aside from
crop failures and disastrous food shortages weather-
related disasters impede economic development and
create political instability. The ongoing 1984
African drought has created large food relief
problems and is generating further political tension
in the Sahel. Assessments cannot eliminate these
disasters but they can provide a warning to decision
makers for planning food security programs.
During 1984, major droughts struck three regions of
Africa. In South Africa, hot dry weather damaged
subsistence cereals in January, February and early
March. The drought sharply reduced crop production
in South Africa, Botswana, Lesotho, Zimbabwe, and
parts of Mozambique and Zambia. The impacts were
especially severe because these countries all
experienced drought problems in the preceding year as
well. In East Africa, crops planted in March and
April were damaged by drought the first half of the
year in Ethiopia, Sudan, Somalia, Kenya, Rwanda, and
parts of Tanzania, Uganda and Zaire. The first six
months of the year were the driest in over 40 years
in central Kenya. In the third region, the Sahel
zone of West and Central Africa, near record heat and
dryness during July and August curtailed growth of
crops planted in May, June, and July. Affected
countries included Mauritania, Senegal, Mali, Burkina
Faso, Niger, Nigeria and Chad. The drought in the
Sahel resulted in crop and grazing losses over an
area of approximately 500,000 sq. miles. For those
countries impacted, that meant a reduction in crop
production of almost 25 percent. The cost on local
economies amounted to approximately $250,000,000.
AISC scientists used the NOAA polar orbiting
satellite for African vegetation assessments. Early
in the growing season, satellite imagery indicated
drought in the Sahel zone of Mali, Burkina, and
Niger. Vegetation indices provided more detailed
coverage of the drought affecting the Sahel zone of
these countries. The mean vegetation indices for
1984 suggest more stress in Niger, Northern Burkina,
and Southern Mali, than in the earlier year. During
July and August 1984, AISC staff prepared specific
asessments for Ethiopia. July - August cumulative
rainfall totaled 60 percent of normal in Tigray,
Ethiopia, and 40 percent of normal in Wollo,
Ethiopia, with rainfall sharply diminishing during
the last 2 weeks of August. The color coordinate
system indicates a significantly lower vegetation
reflectance in 1984 than in 1983.
AISC has verified results for most of Sahel Africa
during the last several years. Droughts were
successfully identified from 30-60 days before crop
harvest. Specifically, forecast lead times were 30
days before crop yield losses, 60 days before price
changes, 90-180 days before declared food shortages.
In August 1984, AISC designated food shortage alerts
for Mauritania, Senegal, Mali, Burkina, Niger, and
Chad. During this time, assessment products included
early warning cables to AID and State Department
Missions, and monthly maps of anomalous climate
conditions to Food Relief Organizations.
SATELLITE ASSESSMENTS AND TRAINING FOR THE MARINE
SECTOR IN THE UNITED STATES
The Assessment and Information Services Center
regularly publishes marine assessments for coastal
and marine resources. The Chesapeake Bay and the
Gulf of Mexico are sites of AISC's marine assessments
in the United States. In the Chesapeake Bay
oceanographers are attempting to quantify the
exchange processes between the Bay and the adjacent
shelf by using satellite data. The physical
processes (i.e., wind, currents, tide) which control
the exchange of waters between the Chesapeake Bay and
the adjacent continental shelf influence the passive
transport of fish eggs and larvae. Recruitment of
several fish species in the Bay, including menhaden,
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