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4-Year NAU Project Will Study National Park Boundaries From Space

Grand Canyon National Park and Kaibab National Forest
NASA
/
file | agency
The line between Grand Canyon National Park and Kaibab National Forest can be seen from space.

A four-year project led by Northern Arizona University will examine how political boundaries can create ecological differences. Researchers will look at the edges between national parks and nearby land — from space.

The team will study satellite images of five national parks in the western United States.  They’ll look for divisions caused by different land management choices, such as logging and grazing.

Clare Aslan of NAU’s Landscape Conservation Initiative leads the project.

“A real piece of evidence that led us to this question was the fact that you can see the line between Grand Canyon National Park and Kaibab National Forest from space,” Aslan said. “Seeing that so clearly really made us wonder, well, is this always the case?”

Aslan will sample vegetation and interview land managers at each park. She want to see how their decisions shape the landscape, and if they collaborate, do those differences go away?

The National Science Foundation awarded the project $1.3 million. Data collection will begin at all five national parks next year.   

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Melissa Sevigny is a reporter at KNAU in Flagstaff.