Integrated system for monitoring and drought risk analysis in Romania.
Poenaru, Violeta Domnica ; Savin, Elena ; Mihailescu, Denis 等
1. INTRODUCTION
The enormous damage caused by drought has determined international
organizations to act on various levels: political, research, management
activities and humanitarian aid. The UN has prepared the United Nations
Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD) and adopted a global action
plan in 1997. FAO supplies information, expert advice and assistance, in
particular to developing countries, in order to help them ensure the
necessary food for their populations. Joint Research Center prepares
agro-meteorological forecasts and derivative products based on satellite
images at high spatial resolution, covering the entire Europe.
Scientific research has shown that various land surface states (i.e
surface soil moisture, land surface temperature, albedo) can efficiently
be monitored from space platforms.
At an international level, drought monitoring systems are still
based on classical methods of processing field data and culture models,
supplying information for irrigation planning. By atmospheric forcings
and land surface parametrization, macroscale hydrological and
atmospheric circulation models have the ability to simulate soil
moisture in the root zone (Liang et al., 1994), which could be used as
drought indicators.
At a national level, the Romanian Ministry of Environment and
Sustainable Development and the Romanian Ministry of Agriculture and
Rural Development have initiated the preparation of a national
management strategy in case of drought.
In this context, it is necessary to create an integrated system for
early warning, monitoring and analysis of the drought risk (SIAT) on the
Romanian territory, combining satellite products and modelling
approaches so that the reliability of hydrological and weather forecasts
can be increased and more accurate prediction information can be made.
2. METHODOLOGY
Based on the Romanian experience gained from the Arges River basin
studies which combined temperature indicators with vegetation condition
indices for the drought monitoring (Kianicka et al., 2007), an
integrated system for early warning, monitoring and drought risk
analysis is developed as an interactive system which provides
information in real time on the basis of meteorological, hydrological
and agricultural drought research features and of the Romanian users
requirements.
The first stage is to establish system's architecture. The
user's interface showed in Fig. 1 is acquired through WMS (Web Map
Service) system comprising client and server application components
integrating in-situ and satellite data with numerical modelling for
thematic map products able to produce complex mapping, either for basic
or for assessment user procedures. This system would allow using the
existing databases which respect to the INSPIRE European Directive.
The system designing and implementation involve a distributed
architecture using the newest Web technologies so that the information
flows between the various types of data (maps, analysis, charts and
synthesis). The front end graphical interface is determined by the
interaction between users and their requests (De Bernardinis, 2007)
(Fig. 2). The functional decomposition of the system foresees:
* access gateway, which allow the users to know and chose available
services, to select possible alternative and to obtain the service;
* end users (decision- making factors);
* the basic component, maps, delivered to users together with an
interpretation report, prepared by experts;
* quality control service component.
[FIGURE 1 OMITTED]
[FIGURE 2 OMITTED]
The research is focused on operational system achiving which
integrates early warning, monitoring and drought risk analysis in the
Romania's regions by access to real time and archive in-situ data
and information, access to data and information produced by other
European services and value added products. For the added products have
been identified reference maps and drought damage assessment maps.
Reference maps are maps derived from pre-existent data or obtained
by pre-event simulations containing cartographic information as well
information about climate change, agricultural practices, surface soil
moisture, main infrastructure and networks, completed with DEM information and combined in a GIS environment by moving from the
1:100.000 to the 1:25.000 scale.
Assesment maps are maps directly derived from in-situ data and
satellite images acquired during the crisis or indirectly obtained
through numerical modeling and comparation between post crisis and
drought archive information, provind information about location, level
of hazard and damage in a scaling moving from detailed scales
(1:10.000-1:25.000) and overview scales (1:50.000- 1:25.000).
The second stage of research activity is focusing on the satellite
techniques, climate numerical modeling, agrometeorology, plants
physiology and drought risk mapping for early warning drought (Fig. 3).
The main requirements for based-space observation are range
resolution (from medium to VHR) and spectral resolution (visible and
IR). Satellite data (NOAA AVHRR, MODIS, MERIS, LANDSAT, MSG, SPOT,
ENVISAT and TerraSAR), received in near-real time or downloaded from
international databases (EOS NASA Gateway, KALIDEOS, European Space data
base) are geometrically and radiometrically corrected, integrated in a
GIS environment and processed together with land use/land cover
information and with climate numerical models results.
NOAA images are used for computing the Normalized Difference
Vegetation Index (NDVI), the Water Supplying Vegetation Index (WSVI) and
the brightness temperature (BT) which is converted to the Vegetation
Condition Index (VCI) and the Temperature Condition Index (TCI). The
differences in TCI values and their spatial distribution give
information where and when the drought is started and how intensive it
is (Jain et al., 2009; Wan et al., 2004). The research also demonstrated
that backscattering coefficient extracted from ERS2 / RADARSAT1 data
characterises surface soil moisture condition and can be used for
drought detection and mapping (Prevot et al., 2003).
[FIGURE 3 OMITTED]
In-situ data can play a crucial role in the emergency situations
allowing a global collection of high precision ground control points and
ad hoc collected information to support the analysis of imagery.
Thus, the early warning is acquired from satellite data processing
and analysis, regional climate modeling and in-situ data. The regional
climate model provides estimates of the rainfall and thermal regimes,
one season, one month and 3 days in advance.
Actually, the system is in implementation phase; it was developed
the user's interface, the strategy and technical coordination. The
future researches consist in algorithms elaboration, processing methods,
statistical analysis of satellite images, the regional climate model,
system application, implementation and verification.
3. CONCLUSION
The system allows forecasting meteorological drought with one
year/season, based on regional climate simulations and agricultural
drought with 3-6 weeks in advance and on the statistical analysis of the
multi-temporal series of satellite images.
Also, the system allows the assessment of drought risk and early
warning, the rapid, regular and very low cost assesment of the areas
impacted by drought, the intensity, spatial dynamics and evolution in
time. Immediate access to information of decision-making factors and of
a high number of users represents a permanent benefit, due to the fact
that the impact of drought varies throughout the year and will allow
taking measures for rapid management actions and consequence mitigation.
4. REFERENCES
De Bernardinis, B. (2007). GMES Fast Track Emergency Response Core
Service. Strategic Implementation Plan, final version, 2007
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(2009). Identification of drought- vulnerable areas using NOAA AVHRR
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Kianicka, J.; Savin, E.; Flueraru, C. & Craciunescu, V.
(2007).Remote Sensing Data Analyses for the Study of Drought,
Proceedings of GIS Ostrava 2007, ISSN 1213 239x, 8 pp, Ostrava 2007
Liang, X.; Lettenmaier, D.; Wood, E. & Burges, S.J. (1994). A
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Prevot, L.; Poenaru, V. D. ; Voicu, P. ; Vintila, R.; DeBoissezon
H. & Pourthie, N. (2003). Surface soil moisture estimation from SAR data over wheat fields during the ADAM project, Geoscience and Remote
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Volume: 4, pp 2885- 2887; July 2003
Wan, Z.; Wang, P. & Li, X. (2004). Using MODIS Land Surface
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monitoring drought in the southern Great Plains, USA International
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