Happy New Year 2020
Dear
LCLUCers, friends of LCLUC, international colleagues,
Greetings
for the New Year 2020. I would like to convey my
best wishes to the whole LCLUC family and our friends around the world.
During
the past 5 years, the geographic focus of the program has been on Asia with
socio-economic aspects of land use as an integral part of the program. However,
the most recent solicitation has opened the geographic interests of the program
to other regions. Our program, along with many colleagues over the world, is investing
in developing multi-source methods in studying LCLUC using all available
mid-resolution resources, Landsat and Sentinel-1,2 being the primary assets as
they freely and easily available. I appreciate contributions from each and
every one of you in keeping the LCLUC a global outreach, vibrant program at
NASA’s Earth Science. This past year the program has had another aspect that may
push the envelope further in our monitoring capabilities. Several of the
ongoing projects were requested to participate in a pilot study to assess the
value to NASA of commercial 0.3 - 3 meter-resolution data from Planet Lab and
Digital Globe companies. The data purchased during this pilot project are
available for the use by NASA-affiliate scientists and there is a good chance
that new data for the projects selected for funding under the ROSES-2020
solicitations will be purchased by NASA and become available free of charge. The
results of the pilot studies are encouraging, the use of very-high resolution
data enhances our abilities in LCLUC monitoring in many ways with some caveats.
The plan is to summarize those findings in a special issue that I will try to
put together for a peer reviewed journal.
We selected 9
out of 22 submitted LCLUC-2018 proposals on Asia, with several new PIs to the
program – who are very welcome! The focus of this solicitation was on Asia so
that SARI got some new additions, but also there are three selected proposals
on Central Asia. ROSES-2019 full proposals will be submitted by Mar 1, 2020
(all 28 step-1 short proposals were encouraged to submit full proposals). The proposals
include studies on Western and Central Asia, Eastern Mediterranean and Latin
America. Since this solicitation is directed at early career scientists (within
6 years of their Ph.D.), the program will be getting new blood and bright younger
minds. ROSES-2020 will be announced as usual by the Valentine Day (mid Feb). The
LCLUC-2020 call will be the third MuSLI round and is similar to the previous
ones in developing innovative methods to use synergistically mid-resolution
data from various sources. However, this time the use of VHR data is a
requirement that has not been in the previous calls. The interest is in “hot
spot regions” where the LCLUC have been rapid during the last several years
with considerable impacts on the society. As with previous MuSLI, the
socio-economic component is not required. There will be no step-1 proposal,
just NOI (which is for NASA information only) – please watch the website and
the announcement of ROSES-2020 for the due dates.
I
usually remind and encourage LCLUCers to pay attention to non-LCLUC ROSES
elements, such as the Carbon Cycle program, Interdisciplinary Science (IDS) Program,
the Terrestrial Ecology and Terrestrial Hydrology programs, and others. Recall
that the LCLUC Science Team includes not only projects that are funded through
the LCLUC base funds but also those LCLUC-related projects that are funded
through some of the above-mentioned Earth Science programs or some selections
from those programs that are indeed supported by the LCLUC funds. This year, please
watch for the IDS call – there must be at least a couple of LCLUC-relevant
elements. Therefore, some of the IDS selections may become LCLUC ST members.
The last spring Science Team meeting was focused on the projects on land use in
Southeast Asia; some synthesis projects were also presented. The meeting
included a session on MuSLI results from the previous MuSLI rounds and rapid
presentations of the newly selected projects. The
next spring Science Team meeting will be held Mar 31-Apr 2, 2020 in Bethesda, Maryland
(see the website for details). The first two days will be totally devoted to
the SARI projects – this will be an All-Hands SARI meeting with considerable
participation by the regional partners and will include presentations from all
SARI projects. The third day will be based on MuSLI projects and will include
reporting of the work with the very high resolution data.
The
regional international LCLUC Science Team meeting was held last July in Johor Bahru, Malaysia (see
details http://lcluc.umd.edu/meetings/sari-searrin-meeting-and-training-malaysia-2019?page=). Thanks
to the local host at University of Technology of Malaysia Dr. Kasturi Kanniah,xs
the SARI lead Krishna (MSFC), and our co-sponsors at NIES (Japan), the meeting
was very smooth and productive. Here, I’d like to commend Dr. Krishna Vadrevu (NASA
Marshall Space Flight Center) who continues serving proactively and effectively
as SARI Project Scientist. He enhanced LCLUC-SERVIR interactions (SERVIR is the
NASA-USAID program directed at developing capacity building in remote sensing capabilities
worldwide) as well as the CEOS capacity building Working Group. More on the
training activities below in this message. Also, see the LCLUC-related meetings
on the LCLUC calendar on the website.
I
am always grateful to PI's who keep us posted on their achievements concerning
published results in peer-reviewed journals and press releases. Those should be
submitted not only to me but to our website curator Meghavi. Your updates on
achievements provide the LCLUC leadership with material to showcase your
projects on our website and in our quarterly e-newsletter, as well as
facilitate promoting your projects to NASA upper management.
The
LCLUC program puts much emphasis on its educational component. All of our
international Science Team meetings include training sessions for building
capacity in regions. Additionally, LCLUC supports the NASA-ESA Trans-Atlantic
Training (TAT) initiative in conjunction with SCERIN workshops organized by Premek
Stych (Charles U. in Prague), Francesco Sarti (ESA) and myself. SARI has had
additional trainings in India, Malaysia and Thailand organized by Krishna
(MSFC) in coordination with GISTDA, SERVIR and CEOS WGCapD. The help of our
regional partners in Thailand Tanita Suepa (GISTDA) and Perry V. (KMUTT U.) is greatly
appreciated.
We continuously improve the program website, maintained by the LCLUC Program
Support Team at U. Maryland. Webinars continue and can be listened to as recordings
on the LCLUC website. If you haven’t looked carefully at the LCLUC website please do so at your
leisure – you’ll find very interesting things if you scroll to the bottom, like
a map of projects’ locations, a map of team members and member pages, a map of
research polygons, the calendar of LCLUC and LCLUC-related meetings and much
more. We need each PI to verify the content of these maps as far as their
projects are concerned. We
also need input from you on the metadata and links to the datasets from the
projects. By the way, once LCLUCer is always an LCLUCer, implying that
even when funding from the program is not currently available for someone, all
LCLUC alumni are invited to keep in touch, attend LCLUC events and submit more
proposals.
I’d
like to emphasize the support I get from Krishna and Chris in running the
program. I even can’t imagine how the program would function without their
diligent support.
I
repeat my appeal to all LCLUCers to help us produce statistics of achievements,
such as high-visibility publications and books, as well as their student
achievements (awards for papers, etc.).
I’d
like to wish all LCLUC members, friends and international colleagues new
exciting results and a fruitful New Year 2020.
- Garik
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