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Long-term database of historical, current, and future land cover for the Delaware River Basin (1680 through 2100)

The USGS’s FORE-SCE model was used to produce a long-term landscape dataset for the Delaware River Basin (DRB). Using historical landscape reconstruction and scenario-based future projections, the data provided land-use and land-cover (LULC) data for the DRB from year 1680 through 2100, with future projections from 2020-2100 modeled for 7 different socioeconomic-based scenarios, and 3 climate realizations for each socioeconomic scenario (21 scenario combinations in total). The projections are characterized by 1) high spatial resolution (30-meter cells), 2) high thematic resolution (20 land use and land cover classes), 3) broad spatial extent (covering the entirety of the Delaware River basin, corresponding to USGS HUC codes 020401 and 020402), 4) use of real land ownership boundaries to ensure realistic representation of landscape patterns, and 5) representation of both anthropogenic land use and natural vegetation change that respond to projected climate change. Data are provided in 10-year time steps from 1680 through 2100 (43 individual dates). Historical landscape data is provided in one downloadable zip file, containing 34 individual land cover datasets for 10-year intervals from 1680 through 2010. “Current” (2020) and “future” (2030 through 2100) data are provided at 10-year time steps in files corresponding to the 21 different scenario combinations. The following provides a brief summary of the 7 major land-use scenarios. 1) Business-as-usual - Based on an extrapolation of recent land-cover trends as derived from remote-sensing data. Overall trends were provided by 2001 to 2016 change in the National Land Cover Database, while change in crop types were extrapolated from 2008 to 2018 change in the Cropland Data Layer. 2) Billion Ton Update (BTU) scenario ($40 farmgate price) - This scenario is based on US Department of Energy biofuel scenarios from the BTU. The $40 scenario represents likely agricultural conditions under an assumed farmgate price of $40 per dry ton of biomass (for the production of biofuel). All three BTU scenarios include the representation of a “perennial grass” class (class #20) that represents grass crops such as miscanthus, switchgrass, or prairie grasses grown for production of cellulosic biofuel. 3) BTU scenario ($60 farmgate price) - This scenario is based on US Department of Energy biofuel scenarios from the BTU. The $60 scenario represents likely agricultural conditions under an assumed farmgate price of $60 per dry ton of biomass (for the production of biofuel). 4) BTU scenario ($80 farmgate price) - This scenario is based on US Department of Energy biofuel scenarios from the BTU. The $80 scenario represents likely agricultural conditions under an assumed farmgate price of $80 per dry ton of biomass (for the production of biofuel). 5) Global Change Analysis Model (GCAM) Reference scenario - Based on global-scale scenarios from the GCAM model, the "reference" scenario provides a likely landscape under a world without specific carbon or climate mitigation efforts. As such, it's another form of a "business-as-usual" scenario. 6) GCAM 2.6 scenario - Based on global-scale scenarios from the GCAM model, the GCAM 2.6 model represents a very aggressive climate mitigation scenario, where carbon payments and other mitigation efforts result in a net radiative forcing of only ~2.6 W/m2 by 2100. 7) GCAM 4.5 scenario - Based on global-scale scenarios from the GCAM model, the GCAM 4.5 model represents a mid-level climate mitigation scenario, where carbon payments and other mitigation efforts result in a net radiative forcing of ~4.5 W/m2 by 2100. For each of the 7 land-use scenarios, three alternative climate / vegetation scenarios were modeled, resulting in 21 unique scenario combinations. The alternative vegetation scenarios represent the potential changes in quantity and distribution of the major vegetation classes that were modeled (grassland, shrubland, deciduous forest, mixed forest, and evergreen forest), as a response to potential future climate conditions. The three alternative vegetation scenarios correspond to climate conditions consistent with 1) The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC's) Representative Concentration Pathway (RCP) 8.5 scenario (a scenario of high climate change), 2) the RCP 4.5 scenario (a mid-level climate change scenario), and 3) a mid-point climate that averages RCP4.5 and RCP8.5 conditions Data are provided here as compressed ZIP files for 1) the historical landscape reconstruction time frame (1680 through 2010), and 2) for each of the 21 future scenario combinations, including the starting 2020 year and extending through 2100 (thus 22 downloadable ZIP files). The “attributes” section of the metadata provides a key for identifying file names associated with each of the scenario combinations and historical period.

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Author(s) Jordan M Dornbierer orcid, Steve Wika orcid, Charles J Robison orcid, Gregory S. Rouze orcid, Terry L Sohl orcid
Publication Date 2021
Beginning Date of Data 1680
Ending Date of Data 2021
Data Contact
DOI https://doi.org/10.5066/P93J4Z2W
Citation Dornbierer, J.M., Wika, S., Robison, C.J., Rouze, G.S., and Sohl, T.L., 2021, Long-term database of historical, current, and future land cover for the Delaware River Basin (1680 through 2100): U.S. Geological Survey data release, https://doi.org/10.5066/P93J4Z2W.
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Metadata Date 2021-04-15
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License http://www.usa.gov/publicdomain/label/1.0/
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Harvest Source: ScienceBase
Harvest Date: 2025-01-06T22:33:54.919Z