Remote sensing for ecology and conservation: a handbook of techniques/
Ned Horning, Julie A. Robinson, Eleanor J. Sterling, Woody Turner and Sasha Spector
- New York: Oxford University Press, 2010.
- xxvi, 467 p. : col. ill., col. maps ; 24 cm.
- (Techniques in ecology and conservation series) .
Introduction: Why ecologists and conservation biologists use remote sensing -- When to use remote sensing -- Working with images -- Measuring and monitoring land cover, land use, and vegetation characteristics -- Terrain and soils -- Marine and coastal environments -- Wetlands--estuaries, inland wetlands, and freshwater lakes -- Atmosphere and climate -- Disturbances : fires and floods -- Landscape fragmentation -- Human interfaces and urban change -- Protected area design and monitoring -- Integrating field data -- Linking remote sensing and modeling -- Global conservation -- Appendix 1: The electromagnetic spectrum -- Appendix 2: Image-processing software -- Appendix 3: Open source software -- Appendix 4: Satellites and sensors -- Appendix 5: Visual interpretation -- Appendix 6: Systems for observing climate and atmospheric phenomena.