United States Environmental Protection Agency	Office of Research and Development

National Exposure Research Laboratory
Research Abstract

Government Performance Results Act (GPRA) Goal #4
Annual Performance Measure #18

Significant Research Findings:

Production of Land Cover/Land Use Digital Database for Southwest U.S.

(Nevada Ecoregional Component)

Scientific	The Gap Analysis Program (GAP) is a national interagency program that maps the

Problem and	distribution of plant communities and selected animal species and compares these

Policy Issues	distributions with land stewardship to identify vulnerable biotic elements at a

regional scale. GAP uses remote sensing (Landsat 7) and Geographic Information
System (GIS) technology to assemble and view large amounts of biological and
land management data to identify areas (gaps) where conservation efforts may not
be sufficient to maintain diversity of living natural resources. Historically, the
GAP program has been conducted by individual states; however, this has resulted
in inconsistencies in mapped distributions of vegetation types and animal habitat
across state lines because of differences in mapping and modeling protocols. This
was further compounded from the lack of a national vegetation classification
nomenclature. In response to these limitations, GAP embarked on a second-
generation effort to conduct the program at a regional scale using 1) a vegetation
classification scheme applicable across the U.S.; 2) ecoregional units as the basis
for segmenting the landscape into manageable units; and 3) interagency
investigator teams with land cover analysis and environmental protection
expertise. The program's first formalized multistate effort includes five
southwestern states (Arizona, Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico, and Utah) which
comprise nearly one-fifth of the conterminous United States. The primary goal is
to develop a detailed contemporary land cover database, digital land ownership
map, and a set of habitat models for selected terrestrial vertebrate species across
the southwestern U.S. This is a collaborative project with the U.S. Geological
Survey, Biological Resources Discipline, and it is GAP's first project organized at
the regional scale. The project is designed to provide digital land cover and
landscape models which are key components for developing large-scale
vulnerability assessments. EPA is a partner with USGS (and other agencies) in the
project and has lead responsibility for the Nevada ecoregional component.

Research	The objective of this APM was to develop digital land cover (and other spatial

Approach	coverages) for the state of Nevada and portions of Arizona and Utah. Additionally,

the information was packaged into an easy-use, public access database (i.e.,
Nevada Geospatial Data Browser) with the purpose of centralizing and distributing
the geospatial data used to create land cover, vertebrate habitat models, and land
stewardship data produced for the state of Nevada.

More than 1.5 billion 30m Landsat pixels have been classified into 125 land cover


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classes to develop a seamless land cover map for the 5-state area. The regional
land cover information is available at the Utah State University server based at
http://earth.gis.usu.edu/swgap/. Multi-season satellite imagery (Landsat ETM+)
from 1999-2001were used in conjunction with digital elevation (DEM) derived
datasets (e.g., elevation, landform, aspect, etc.) to model natural and seminatural
vegetation. Land cover classes are drawn from NatureServe's Ecological System
concept, with 109 of the 125 total classes mapped at the system level. For the
majority of classes, a decision tree classifier was used to discriminate land cover
types, while a minority of classes (e.g., urban classes, sand dunes, burn scars, etc.)
were mapped using other techniques. Twenty mapping areas, each characterized
by similar ecological and spectra characteristics, were modeled independently of
one another. These mapping areas, which included a 4-km overlap, were
subsequently mosaiced to create the regional dataset. An internal validation for
modeled classes was performed by withholding 20% of the sample data as a
reference data set. While the modeling area encompassed these five southwestern
states, the actual GIS dataset can be downloaded as a subset of the 5-state region
using state, county, TNC ecoregion, Bailey ecoregion, and Southwest Regional
Gap Analysis Project (SWReGAP) mapping zone configurations. Each file
contains a folder with the dataset in Arclnfo grid or ERDAS Imagine format as
specified, FGDC metadata file(s), and a .pdf document of land cover class
descriptions.

The Nevada Geospatial Data Browser (EPA/600/C-05/005) includes complete GIS
coverages (n=37) and metadata for the entire state of Nevada. The coverages are
available for download and the metadata include important information relative to
acquisition, location, processing level, file size, and format. The data browser was
externally peer reviewed by six reviewers who are experts in spatial datasets and
have direct responsibility for managing and protecting natural resources in the
state of Nevada. They included the U.S. Bureau of Land Management (Nevada
State Office), Nevada Department of Wildlife, The Nature Conservancy (Nevada
Field Office), University of Nevada (State Mapping Advisory Committee), and
EPA Region IX.

Results and	The Southwest is the fastest growing region of the U.S. according to U.S. Census

Impact	records. This growth results in changes to the landscape and the goods and

services it supports. The growth taking place in the West often results in impacts
to the air, water, and natural habitats and affects key societal values associated
with watershed condition and biodiversity. Regional and local decision-makers are
concerned about how continued development will alter living conditions and the
ability of the environment to sustain productivity and quality. The digital land
cover map and associated coverages developed for the project area will be the
most comprehensive digital database ever assembled for the region. They will
provide source data for decision analysis relative to resource management,
environmental protection, and future conditions.

The digital land cover and associated spatial data for the Southwest Regional Gap
Analysis Project models were completed in collaboration with the U.S.

Geological Survey (Biological Resources Discipline), Utah State University, New
Mexico State University, Colorado Division of Wildlife, NatureServe, Nevada
Natural Heritage Program (Department of Conservation and Natural Resources),

Research
Collaboration
and Research
Products


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U.S. Bureau of Land Management, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and the
Nevada Department of Wildlife. Funding to ORD/NERL/ESD was provided
from Interagency Agreement No. RW14939145 from USGS, Biological
Resources Discipline.

Kepner, W.G., P. Comer, D. Osborne, D. Semmens, and K. Gergely. "The Southwest Regional Gap
Analysis Project: A Database Model for Regional Landscape Assessment, Resource Planning, and
Vulnerability Analysis." Nineteenth Annual Symposium of the U.S. Regional Association of the
International Association for Landscape Ecology: Transdisciplinary Challenges in Landscape
Ecology. March 30-April 2, 2004. Las Vegas, NV.

Kepner, W.G., D.F. Bradford, and T.D. Sajwaj. "An Approach for Determining Regional Land
Cover and Species Habitat Conservation Status in the American Southwest: the Southwest Regional
Gap Analysis Project." 36th Annual Meeting of the Desert Fishes Council. 11-14 November 2004.
Tucson, AZ.

Kepner, W.G., D.F. Bradford, and T.D. Sajwaj. "An Inter-agency Approach for Determining
Regional Land Cover and Species Habitat Conservation Status in the American Southwest: the
Southwest Regional Gap Analysis Project." EPA Science Forum 2005. 16-18 May 2005.
Washington, D.C.

The Landscape Ecology Branch of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
(Las Vegas, NV) with the assistance and collaboration of the University of Idaho
(Moscow, ID) and Lockheed-Martin Environmental Services (Las Vegas, NV)
has developed the Nevada Geospatial Data Browser, a spatial data archive to
centralize and distribute the geospatial data used to create the land cover,
vertebrate habitat models, and land ownership/stewardship maps produced for the
Nevada ecoregional component of the SWReGAP project. The purpose of the
data browser is to provide a one-stop, easy-access product for the user community
to assist in natural resource management and improve environmental decision-
making. The Nevada Geospatial Data Browser utilizes data from a number of
sources and has assembled 37 complete GIS datasets into 10 data categories (land
cover maps, land cover training data, digital elevation model, soils and geology,
climate data, ecoregional boundaries, political boundaries, hydrology,
miscellaneous land cover [i.e., sand dunes and fi re history], and miscellaneous
vector data [i.e., roads, quad boundaries, Landsat scene boundaries, cities and
towns]) for the entire state of Nevada. The data browser includes important
metadata information relative to acquisition, location, processing level, projection,
file size, and format. The Nevada Geospatial Data Browser is currently available
on-line via the EPA Web site (http://www.epa.gov/nerlesdl/land-sci/gap.htm) and
distributed in limited release on DVD.

William G. Kepner1, Todd D. Sajwaj2, David F. Bradford1, and Edward J. Evanson3 Nevada
Geospatial Databrowser, 2005.

1	U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Research and Development, Las Vegas, NV

2	University of Idaho, College of Natural Resources, Moscow, ID

3	Lockheed Martin Environmental Services, Las Vegas, NV

Future	A National Gap Analysis Conference and Interagency Symposium featuring the

Research	Southwest Regional Gap Analysis Project (Arizona, Colorado, Nevada, New

Mexico, and Utah) will be held in Reno, NV, on 6-8 December 2005. The


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conference has been organized by the U.S. Geological Survey (National Gap
Program Office), U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, U.S. Bureau of Land
Management, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and the University of Idaho. The
Nevada Geospatial Data Browser will be an invited presentation and undoubtedly
it will lead to multiple applications, e.g., watershed analysis, fire management,
habitat modeling, invasive species monitoring, landscape assessment, vulnerability
analysis, and other related research.

Contacts for Questions and inquiries can be directed to:

Additional	William G. Kepner

Information	U.S. EPA, Office of Research and Development

National Exposure Research Laboratory
Landscape Ecology Branch
P.O. Box 93478
Las Vegas, NV 89193-3478
Phone: 702/798-2193
FAX: 702/798-2208
E-mail: kepner.william@epa.gov

Funding for this project was through the U.S. Geological Survey, Biological
Resources Division (Interagency Agreement RW14939145) and the U.S. EPA's
Office of Research and Development, National Exposure Research Laboratory.
The work was conducted by the Environmental Sciences Division.


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