Publications by authors named "Michael A Menarguez"

Article Synopsis
  • The study provides annual maps of surface water bodies in China from 1989 to 2016, revealing varying trends in surface water area (SWA) across the country with a decrease in the north and an increase in the south.
  • It highlights the continuing losses in terrestrial water storage (TWS) in northern China, suggesting long-term water stress affecting approximately 569 million people in these areas.
  • The findings and data set can aid government and public efforts in managing water resources and addressing security challenges in China.
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The contiguous United States (CONUS), especially the West, faces challenges of increasing water stress and uncertain impacts of climate change. The historical information of surface water body distribution, variation, and multidecadal trends documented in remote-sensing images can aid in water-resource planning and management, yet is not well explored. Here, we detected open-surface water bodies in all Landsat 5, 7, and 8 images (∼370,000 images, >200 TB) of the CONUS and generated 30-meter annual water body frequency maps for 1984-2016.

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Oklahoma contains the largest number of manmade lakes and reservoirs in the United States. Despite the importance of these open surface water bodies to public water supply, agriculture, thermoelectric power, tourism and recreation, it is unclear how these water bodies have responded to climate change and anthropogenic water exploitation in past decades. In this study, we used all available Landsat 5 and 7 images (16,000 scenes) from 1984 through 2015 and a water index- and pixel-based approach to analyze the spatial-temporal variability of open surface water bodies and its relationship with climate and water exploitation.

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Area and spatial distribution information of paddy rice are important for understanding of food security, water use, greenhouse gas emission, and disease transmission. Due to climatic warming and increasing food demand, paddy rice has been expanding rapidly in high latitude areas in the last decade, particularly in northeastern (NE) Asia. Current knowledge about paddy rice fields in these cold regions is limited.

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Article Synopsis
  • Rapid population growth and urbanization are leading to significant changes in paddy rice agriculture patterns in China and India, two of the most populous countries focused on food security.
  • There is a lack of spatially explicit and continuous data on rice planting areas in these countries, which complicates our understanding of environmental impacts like food and water security, climate change, and disease transmission.
  • Between 2000 and 2015, China's paddy rice area decreased while India's increased, with distinct shifts in spatial patterns: China's rice cultivation moved northeast, while India's expanded across various regions, raising concerns about food security and environmental issues.
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Knowledge of the area and spatial distribution of paddy rice is important for assessment of food security, management of water resources, and estimation of greenhouse gas (methane) emissions. Paddy rice agriculture has expanded rapidly in northeastern China in the last decade, but there are no updated maps of paddy rice fields in the region. Existing algorithms for identifying paddy rice fields are based on the unique physical features of paddy rice during the flooding and transplanting phases and use vegetation indices that are sensitive to the dynamics of the canopy and surface water content.

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Extensive forest changes have occurred in monsoon Asia, substantially affecting climate, carbon cycle and biodiversity. Accurate forest cover maps at fine spatial resolutions are required to qualify and quantify these effects. In this study, an algorithm was developed to map forests in 2010, with the use of structure and biomass information from the Advanced Land Observation System (ALOS) Phased Array L-band Synthetic Aperture Radar (PALSAR) mosaic dataset and the phenological information from MODerate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MOD13Q1 and MOD09A1) products.

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