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The National Agricultural Statistics Service, the statistical arm of the US Department of Agriculture, and the Multi-Resolution Land Characteristics Consortium, a group of the US federal agencies, collect and publish several land-use and land-cover data sets. The aim of this study is to analyze the consistency of forestland estimates based on two widely used, publicly available products: the National Land-Cover Database (NLCD) and Cropland Data Layer (CDL). Both remote-sensing-based products provide raster-formatted land-cover categorization at a spatial resolution of 30 m. Although the processing of the yearly published CDL non-agricultural land-cover data is based on less frequently updated NLCD, the consistency of large-area forestland mapping between these two datasets has not been assessed. To assess the similarities and the differences between CDL- and NLCD-based forestland mappings for the state of North Carolina, we overlay the two data products for the years 2011 and 2016 in ArcMap 10.5.1 and analyze the location and attributes of the matched and mismatched forestland. We find that the mismatch is relatively smaller for the areas of the state where forests occupy larger shares of the total land, and that the relative mismatch is smaller in 2011 when compared to 2016. We also find that a large portion of the forestland mismatch is attributable to the dynamics of re-growth of periodically harvested and otherwise disturbed forests. Our results underscore the need for a holistic approach to data preparation, data attribution, and data accuracy when performing high-scale map-based analyses using each of these products.more » « less
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null (Ed.)Food desert communities face persistent barriers in accessing affordable fresh and healthy foods, particularly for the underserved and limited-resourced minority population. This research brief proposes an integrated design concept examining human-environment dynamics of food deserts to identify strategies that would provide effective planning to prevent, prepare for, or respond to disruptive events such as natural disasters or pandemics in the future. The North Carolina example we describe identifies the potential overlapping areas between food deserts and number of COVID-19 cases to demonstrate how an unpredictable event could exacerbate public health in food desert communities to a greater extent than in communities with better food access, availability, and accessibility. The improved understanding of food systems could help in addressing unprecedented challenges such as those due to the COVID-19 crisis.more » « less
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The study evaluates land use impacts of corn stover markets for the state of Iowa. To tie land use decisions to their economic basis, we use an economic model to simulate profit-maximizing choices of crop-tillage rotations and stover collection, and evaluate the impacts of the stover collection restrictions imposed on the land of lower productivity, as defined by the land with Corn Suitability Rating below 80. We find that stover collection is likely to lead to substantial shifts in rotations favoring continuous corn at stover prices above $50/ton. This crop rotation shift is accompanied by the changes in tillage rotations favoring both continuous conventional tillage and, to a lesser extent, continuous conservation tillage. The crop-rotation impacts of stover markets differ substantially between the restricted and unrestricted stover markets. This finding illustrates the importance of differentiating among the cropland of alternative soil quality when assessing the impacts of corn stover markets.more » « less
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