Frontiers in Climate (Apr 2021)

GLOBE Observer and the GO on a Trail Data Challenge: A Citizen Science Approach to Generating a Global Land Cover Land Use Reference Dataset

  • Holli A. Kohl,
  • Holli A. Kohl,
  • Peder V. Nelson,
  • John Pring,
  • Kristen L. Weaver,
  • Kristen L. Weaver,
  • Daniel M. Wiley,
  • Ashley B. Danielson,
  • Ryan M. Cooper,
  • Heather Mortimer,
  • Heather Mortimer,
  • David Overoye,
  • Autumn Burdick,
  • Suzanne Taylor,
  • Mitchell Haley,
  • Samual Haley,
  • Josh Lange,
  • Morgan E. Lindblad,
  • Morgan E. Lindblad

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fclim.2021.620497
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3

Abstract

Read online

Land cover and land use are highly visible indicators of climate change and human disruption to natural processes. While land cover is frequently monitored over a large area using satellite data, ground-based reference data is valuable as a comparison point. The NASA-funded GLOBE Observer (GO) program provides volunteer-collected land cover photos tagged with location, date and time, and, in some cases, land cover type. When making a full land cover observation, volunteers take six photos of the site, one facing north, south, east, and west (N-S-E-W), respectively, one pointing straight up to capture canopy and sky, and one pointing down to document ground cover. Together, the photos document a 100-meter square of land. Volunteers may then optionally tag each N-S-E-W photo with the land cover types present. Volunteers collect the data through a smartphone app, also called GLOBE Observer, resulting in consistent data. While land cover data collected through GLOBE Observer is ongoing, this paper presents the results of a data challenge held between June 1 and October 15, 2019. Called “GO on a Trail,” the challenge resulted in more than 3,300 land cover data points from around the world with concentrated data collection in the United States and Australia. GLOBE Observer collections can serve as reference data, complementing satellite imagery for the improvement and verification of broad land cover maps. Continued collection using this protocol will build a database documenting climate-related land cover and land use change into the future.

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