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Tree Cover of Kansas, Kansas Forest Service

The Kansas Forest Service and partners have completed a comprehensive tree mapping project. | Download this photo.

Kansas Forest Service completes rural tree canopy mapping

The rural tree canopy in Kansas totals more than 3.8 million acres

July 14, 2017

 

MANHATTAN, Kan. — Kansas recently became one of the few states in the U.S., and the first state in the Great Plains, to successfully map its rural tree canopy. The Kansas Forest Service partnered with the United States Forest Service – Northern Research Station (USFS-NRS) to develop the geospatial layer.

The USFS-NRS provided funding and methodology expertise, while the Kansas Forest Service geographic information system team did the legwork to map trees in all 105 Kansas counties. Kansas Forest Service GIS specialist, Darci Paull and two Kansas State University students worked on the project for 11 months. Student workers Jakob Whitson and Abbey Marcotte started the mapping work, and Tanner Finney was recently hired after Whitson graduated.

The mapping began in June 2016 using specialized software and was published in June 2017.

The GIS team is currently inventorying windbreaks statewide using a tool developed by the U.S. Forest Service, Paull said. The tool creates a grid and the team maps each windbreak that crosses an intersect for two different years (2005 and 2015). The USFS-NRS is analyzing the initial data to see what changes have occurred over time.

The tree canopy project and linear intersect tool are part of an effort to map trees in the Great Plains outside of forests. A forest is defined as an acre of trees measuring 120 feet by 363 feet. Much of the treed areas in the Great Plains does not meet the specification of 120 feet wide, so is often underreported. Even after the linear intersect work is finished, the partnership plans to use innovative GIS techniques to improve geospatial data.

“These new mapping tools and results will allow us to better manage our natural resources,” Paull said.

The new projects are just the start. “Soon we will have new maps and analyses that will include the tree canopy,” Paull said. “With the success of the tree canopy, we are thrilled to continue our partnership with the USFS-NRS.”

“The Kansas Forest Service is most pleased to be working with the U.S. Forest Service’s National Agroforestry Center and the Northern Research Station’s Forestry Inventory and Analysis Unit on the canopy project,” said Larry Biles, state forester for Kansas. “The information provided by these units allows us to better quantify the magnitude of forest and trees outside the state’s Forest Inventory Analysis zones, and over time, this project will provide valuable trend data. Additionally, the canopy project is a useful higher education training tool as it is providing practical work experience for GIS students at Kansas State University.”

The tree canopy dataset has been published at https://doi.org/10.2737/RDS-2017-0025

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About the Kansas Forest Service

The Kansas Forest Service is the nation’s fifth oldest state forestry agency. The agency serves rural landowners, communities, rural fire districts, forest and arboriculture industries, and citizens of the state through its Conservation Tree and Shrub Planting, Fire Management, Community Forestry, Rural Forestry, Marketing and Utilization, and Forest Health programs. The Kansas Forest Service state office is located in Manhattan, Kansas, just west of the campus of Kansas State University. The Kansas Forest Service is housed as an independent agency within K-State Research and Extension. The agency receives its direction from a mission statement that reads: “Care of Natural Resources and Service to People through Forestry.”

Source

Darci Paull, GIS Specialist, Kansas Forest Service
785-532-3312
dpaull@ksu.edu

Website

Database, Tree Cover of Kansas

At a glance

Kansas recently became one of the few states in the U.S., and the first state in the Great Plains, to successfully map its rural tree canopy.

Notable quote

“These new mapping tools and results will allow us to better manage our natural resources."

-- Darci Paull, GIS specialist with the Kansas Forest Service

 

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K‑State Research and Extension is a short name for the Kansas State University Agricultural Experiment Station and Cooperative Extension Service, a program designed to generate and distribute useful knowledge for the wellbeing of Kansans.
Supported by county, state, federal and private funds, the program has county extension offices, experiment fields, area extension offices and regional research centers statewide. Its headquarters is on the K‑State campus in Manhattan.