Grassland Resilience

Biodiversity, resilience and food security: understanding the role of biodiversity in maintaining food production

Overview

The project is part of a consortium worth £1.2m including University College Dublin (Dr. Jon Yearsley) and Queen's University Belfast (Dr. Paul Caplat and Prof. Mark Emmerson). The project is investigating the factors that determine the stability of grassland production systems. The project is funded by Science Foundation Ireland in the Republic of Ireland and by the Department for Economy in Northern Ireland. This page mirrors details on the lead partner's site at UCD - see here...

Introduction

Agriculture and the environment is of great economic and cultural importance to the people of Ireland. In particular sustained economic growth and food security both require agricultural production that is resilient to dramatic environmental changes. This project focuses on agricultural grassland productivity to investigate if the biodiversity surrounding farm-grasslands promote resilient agricultural productivity.

We are using information from satellite images (animation shown on the left), unmanned aerial drones and experimental plots. We are producing maps of Ireland that look into the near-future, showing areas where production is riskier when faced with extreme events, such as the conditions that created the fodder crisis of 2012-13.

The animation on the left shows data from the MODIS data obtained from the Terra and Aqua satellites for agricultural grassland in Ireland. The colour estimates plant productivity by measuring the 'greeness' of the land (white space correpsond to areas with little agricultural pasture, based on the CORINE land cover data). The greeness index displayed here is called EVI (Enhanced Vegetation Index).. EVI ranges from 0 to 1. Larger values of EVI approximately correspond to high plant productivity. In this animation each pixel is a 1 km square.





The graph above shows the mean EVI anomaly (solid line) across all 1 km squares of agricultural pasture in Ireland (the shaded region shows the variation across Ireland, 1 standard deviation). The fodder crisis of 2012-2013 is seen where the EVI anomaly becomes negative, indicating an extended period of unusually low grassland production for the time of year. However, not all locations were equally affected by the fodder crisis (the gray shaded region). This project is looking into the role of landscape biodiversity in this variation in the resilience of grassland production.

The EVI anomaly measures the deviation of grassland production away from the 10 year average (shown in the animation). Negative values of the anomaly represent low EVI values relative to the 10 year average for that location at that time of year. An anomaly less than -1 would be expected once every 6 years, given the observed historical year-to-year variation.

Multispectral drone images

Each experimental plot is being imaged in five wavelength bands (red, green, blue, red-edge and near infrared) using a multispectral camera (Micasense RedEdge) mounted on a drone. Coastway Surveys are performing this surveying for us (see black and white photo).

An example of the images being obtained can be seen on the left. You can see the rectangular fence surrounding the 10m x 6m experimental plot, and the squares within the plot are the experimental treatments. The rectangles outside the experimental plot are the roofs from the drought shelters.

These images are equivalent to the images from MODIS but at a resolution that is 50 times finer. These images will be used to calculate vegetation indices that give detailed information on grass yield throughout the experiment.

Similar vegetation indices can be obtained from MODIS. Comparing aerial drome images to the MODIS satellite images will allow us to make better use of the MODIS data across the whole of Ireland.





Cooking for each other and eating together after hard days working in the field.