This study analyzed the changes of land use and land cover (LULC) in New Jersey in the United States from 2007 to 2012. The goal was to identify the driving factors of these changes and to project the five-year trend to 2100. LULC data was obtained from the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection. The original 86 classes were reclassified to 11 classes. Data analysis and projection were performed using TerrSet 2020. Results from 2007 to 2012 showed that the rate of LULC changes was relatively small. Most changes happened to brush/grasslands, mixed forest lands, farmlands and urban/developed lands. Urban/developed lands and the mixed-forest cover gained while farmlands lost. Using a multi-layer perceptron–Markov chain (MLP–MC) mode...
New Jersey, the Garden State, contains the highest population density of any state in the United Sta...
Urbanization is a rapid global trend, leading to consequences such as urban heat islands and local f...
New England has lost more than 350,000 ha of forest cover since 1985, marking a reversal of a two-hu...
The analysis reported on herein represents an analysis of the change in the state’s land use/land co...
Land use and land cover (LULC) patterns play an important role in the establishment and spread of in...
As reflected in Year 2000 Census data, New Jersey continues to increase in population. Accompanying ...
This report is part of an ongoing series of collaborative studies between Rutgers and Rowan Universi...
This report is an excerpt of research on measuring urban sprawl in New Jersey being conducted at Rut...
In cooperation with the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection (NJDEP) and the National ...
The creation of land preservation policies are, in part, a response to real and perceived landscape ...
The Long Island Sound Watersheds (LISW) are experiencing significant land use/cover change (LUCC), w...
This executive summary of a full report (rutgers-lib:35341) is part of an ongoing series of collabor...
Last decades of research have revealed the environmental impacts of Land-Use/Cover Change (LUCC) thr...
New England has lost more than 350,000 ha of forest cover since 1985, marking a reversal of a two-hu...
Land cover changes threaten biodiversity by impacting the natural habitats and require careful and c...
New Jersey, the Garden State, contains the highest population density of any state in the United Sta...
Urbanization is a rapid global trend, leading to consequences such as urban heat islands and local f...
New England has lost more than 350,000 ha of forest cover since 1985, marking a reversal of a two-hu...
The analysis reported on herein represents an analysis of the change in the state’s land use/land co...
Land use and land cover (LULC) patterns play an important role in the establishment and spread of in...
As reflected in Year 2000 Census data, New Jersey continues to increase in population. Accompanying ...
This report is part of an ongoing series of collaborative studies between Rutgers and Rowan Universi...
This report is an excerpt of research on measuring urban sprawl in New Jersey being conducted at Rut...
In cooperation with the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection (NJDEP) and the National ...
The creation of land preservation policies are, in part, a response to real and perceived landscape ...
The Long Island Sound Watersheds (LISW) are experiencing significant land use/cover change (LUCC), w...
This executive summary of a full report (rutgers-lib:35341) is part of an ongoing series of collabor...
Last decades of research have revealed the environmental impacts of Land-Use/Cover Change (LUCC) thr...
New England has lost more than 350,000 ha of forest cover since 1985, marking a reversal of a two-hu...
Land cover changes threaten biodiversity by impacting the natural habitats and require careful and c...
New Jersey, the Garden State, contains the highest population density of any state in the United Sta...
Urbanization is a rapid global trend, leading to consequences such as urban heat islands and local f...
New England has lost more than 350,000 ha of forest cover since 1985, marking a reversal of a two-hu...