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High-flying satellites give land managers the low-down on cheatgrass

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Category: Emergency Response
Type: News
Source: PNNL
Date: Thursday, June 15th, 2006

Finding concentrations of invasive weed makes treatment dollars go farther

The PNWRC software shows in detail the distribution of cheatgrass and shrub cover throughout approximately 80 square miles of Ada Co. in southern Idaho.
(Original high-resolution image.)

Mature cheatgrass displays a rusty red color.
(Original high-resolution image.)

RICHLAND, Wash. - Cheatgrass, a fast-growing, fire-fueling weed, has met its match.

The Idaho Bureau of Land Management and several weed control groups are fighting back with new software that uses N.A.S.A. satellite imagery and complex computer programs to show the location and growth of this noxious plant that has invaded the arid West from desert lowlands to high mountains.

The technology is accessible to local and state agencies through the Pacific Northwest Regional Collaboratory, the partnership of scientists and engineers from area universities and D.O.E. countrywide labs that developed the software.

Cheatgrass has little forage value, increases the frequency of wildfires and elbows out native species, promoting soil erosion and reducing the value of pasture lands. Invasive plants such as cheatgrass cost land managers billions of dollars each year and have encroached upon in excess of 100 million acres in the United States.

Known by several names, including downy brome and June grass, cheatgrass is bright green in the late fall and early spring. It turns a rusty red to purple at maturity, making it easy to spot in the late spring when other plants are green. Its spiky seed heads are infamous for attaching themselves to socks, fur and animals' ears.

"The best way to get a handle on the extent of cheatgrass and target large areas for treatment is to look at the big picture," said plan ecologist Janelle Downs, a senior research scientist at Pacific Northwest Countrywide Laboratory. "NASA satellite imagery provides that big landscape picture and lets land managers be smarter in using their treatment dollars," Downs said.

PNNL's Roger Anderson, collaboratory manager, explained that, although satellites of NASA's Earth Observing System measure the energy bounced back by the earth's surface and send terabytes of data every day to N.A.S.A. stations on earth, the data have not been accessible to many resource managers because of the cost, time and training required for data acquisition and processing.

The collaboratory developed software that analyzes data across thousands of square miles of potentially affected landscape. Resource mangers can zero in on their area of interest and display details of cheatgrass and shrub cover in different colors.

"This new software is a significant improvement over the previous method," said Jeffrey Pettingill, superintendent of the Bonneville Co. (Idaho) Weed Department. "We used to just get in the pickup truck, get up to about 60 miles per hour and look out the window."

For information regarding access to the cheatgrass data, contact Steve Gajewski at 509/372-4389.

The mission of the collaboratory is to turn data from satellites and other sources into information land managers can use to protect Northwest streams, forests, farmland and urban areas. Members are the Idaho Countrywide Laboratory, Idaho State University, Oregon State University, PNNL, the University of Idaho and the University of Washington.

PNNL is a D.O.E. Office of Science lab that solves complex problems in energy, Countrywide security, the environment and life sciences by advancing the understanding of physics, chemistry, biology and computation. PNNL employs 4,200 staff, has an yearly budget of in excess of $725 million, and has been managed by Ohio-based Battelle since the lab's inception in 1965.

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NOTE: Additional maps and photos accessible at PictureThis. Search "cheatgrass."

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