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Evaluating Conservation Program Success with Landsat and SWAT
Authors:Michael J White  Daniel E Storm  Philip Busteed  Scott Stoodley and Shannon J Phillips
Institution:(1) USDA-ARS Grassland, Soil, and Water Research Laboratory, 808 East Blackland Road, Temple, TX 76502-6712, USA;(2) Biosystems Engineering, 110 Ag Hall, Oklahoma State University, Stillwater, OK 74078-6021, USA;(3) USDA-ARS, Grazinglands Research Laboratory, 7207 West Cheyenne Street, El Reno, OK 73036, USA;(4) V.P. Water Resources, ENTRIX Inc., 20 Trafalgar Square, Suite 416, Nashua, NH 03063, USA;(5) Water Quality Division, Oklahoma Conservation Commission, 4545 N. Lincoln Boulevard, Lincoln Plaza Office, Suite 11A, Oklahoma City, OK 73105, USA
Abstract:In the United States, many state and federally funded conservation programs are required to quantify the water quality benefits resulting from their efforts. The objective of this research was to evaluate the impact of conservation practices subsidized by the Oklahoma Conservation Commission on phosphorus and sediment loads to Lake Wister. Conservation practices designed to increase vegetative cover in grazed pastures were evaluated using Landsat imagery and the Soil and Water Assessment Tool (SWAT). Several vegetative indices were derived from Landsat imagery captured before and after the implementation of conservation practices. Collectively, these indicators provided an estimate of the change in vegetative soil cover attributable to conservation practices in treated fields. Field characteristics, management, and changes in vegetative cover were used in the SWAT model to simulate sediment and phosphorus losses before and after practice implementation. Overall, these conservation practices yielded a 1.9% improvement in vegetative cover and a predicted sediment load reduction of 3.5%. Changes in phosphorus load ranged from a 1.0% improvement to a 3.5% increase, depending upon initial vegetative conditions. The use of fertilizers containing phosphorus as a conservation practice in low-productivity pastures was predicted by SWAT to increase net phosphorus losses despite any improvement in vegetative cover. This combination of vegetative cover analysis and hydrologic simulation was a useful tool for evaluating the effects of conservation practices at the basin scale and may provide guidance for the selection of conservation measures subsidized in future conservation programs.
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