2010
DOI: 10.1007/s11852-010-0127-y
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An assessment of coastal land-use and land-cover change from 1974–2008 in the vicinity of Mobile Bay, Alabama

Abstract: The purpose of this research is to quantify and assess geospatial land-use and land-cover (LULC) changes in the coastal counties of Mobile and Baldwin, Alabama using nine Landsat images from 1974-2008. A studyspecific classification scheme was devised comprising upland herbaceous, upland forest, non-woody and woody wetlands, open water, and urban categories. Upland forest was the most dominant terrestrial cover type. Wetlands averaged 17% and urban averaged 7%.

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Cited by 40 publications
(24 citation statements)
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“…This high specificity, however, is a potential impediment to the derivation of C-CAP products from Landsat MSS data, which has a nominal spatial resolution of 79 meters and bands only in the visible and near infrared portions of the spectrum. Not all members of the coastal zone management community require such high specificity to conduct basic, yet meaningful, coastal LULC change detection (e.g., Ellis et al 2011). For example, some coastal zone managers are simply interested in determining basic LULC trends.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This high specificity, however, is a potential impediment to the derivation of C-CAP products from Landsat MSS data, which has a nominal spatial resolution of 79 meters and bands only in the visible and near infrared portions of the spectrum. Not all members of the coastal zone management community require such high specificity to conduct basic, yet meaningful, coastal LULC change detection (e.g., Ellis et al 2011). For example, some coastal zone managers are simply interested in determining basic LULC trends.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, for such a method to be successful, it needs to be conducted using a simplified LULC classification scheme and with as few as one data set per 5-year interval. The simplified LULC scheme adopted in this study is based on end-user (resource manager) requirements as described by Ellis et al (2011) and comprises: the following categories: 1) open water; 2) barren; 3) upland herbaceous; 4) nonwoody wetland; 5) upland forest; 6) woody wetlands; and 7) urban. This scheme can also be readily applied to recoded (generalized) C-CAP and NLCD products.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…ecological, hydrological) studying the viability of these projects is important to understanding watershed scale processes. Erosion due to urbanization over the last three decades has caused unconsolidated materials to remobilize and pollute downstream ecosystems and put a large burden on existing infrastructure 3 . The town of Daphne, in coastal Alabama, has been conducting restoration projects to mitigate erosion, but do not have a plan to comprehensively monitor built floodplains long-term (Figure 1).…”
Section: Acknowledgementsmentioning
confidence: 99%