News releases

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
December 15, 1998

CONTACT: George R. Diak (608) 263-5862; george.diak@ssec.wisc.edu

CONSORTIUM TO BRING SPACE AGE FORECASTS TO FARM, FOREST

MADISON - A new, NASA-funded research initiative, combining expertise from
universities, industry, and state and federal government promises to bring
space age technology to farm and forest in the Upper Midwest.

Organized as a consortium and based at based at the University of
Wisconsin-Madison and the University of Minnesota-Twin Cities, the new
program is one of seven regional earth science application centers funded
as part of a $14 million effort to direct NASA technology to solving
environmentally related societal problems.

The UW-Madison component of the new consortium is a combined effort of the
Space Science and Engineering Center (SSEC) and the Departments of
Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences, Soil Science and Forest Ecology and
Management. It will be directed by George Diak, a senior SSEC scientist,
and will focus on the development of new tools -- computer models and new
remote sensing and meteorological technologies -- to aid management
decisions made by agricultural and natural resource managers. UM-Twin
Cities scientists will concentrate on monitoring natural resource bases
themselves.

The new center, Diak said, has two primary goals: "We want to have a
significant positive impact on the economy of the Upper Midwest by applying
computer models and new measurement tools to current resource problems, and
we want to create new tools to help give us insight into the potential
effects of different management practices.

"This includes looking at things like the potential effects of regional
climate changes and their influence on forestry and agriculture, and our
ability to sustain natural and managed environments," Diak said.

Other members of the Wisconsin component of the consortium include Champion
International Corp., Case Corp. of Racine, the Wisconsin Department of
Natural Resources and the U.S. Forest Service.

According to Diak, the consortium will work on building computer models
that depend on remote sensing technology, satellite-based instruments
capable of making detailed measurements of the atmosphere or land over
large geographic distances. As NASA's Earth Observing System is deployed
over the next decade, a wealth of new satellites and satellite-based tools
for measuring the Earth and its atmosphere will come into play.

Using those measurements to power new computer models, Diak said,
scientists can help farmers and resource managers determine things like
soil moisture, nitrogen content of the soil and grain moisture as crops
mature. In forests, by observing and modeling conditions of the soil,
plants and atmosphere, it may be possible to forecast disease and insect
infestations.

Already, Diak said, there are models that help farmers decide when to
irrigate, when to apply chemicals for disease control, and that warn
cranberry growers of the potential for overnight frost. Examples of those
models can be found on the World Wide Web at
http://bob.soils.wisc.edu/nasacan.html.

The consortium's industrial members would help find "cost-efficient methods
of commercializing emerging farming technologies," said James Stoddart,
vice president for Case Corporation's Advanced Farming System's Division.

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