



The Center for Remote Sensing was established in 1998 by the late Dr. Sun-Fu Shih. The funding for the center was provided by the “Taiwan R.O.C. Fund” from the Chinese Taipei Committee, International Commission on Irrigation and Drainage, Taipei, R.O.C. The CRS plays a major role in helping to improve agricultural production and conserve natural resources in Florida, through research and application of remote sensing and related technologies. The research and teaching at the CRS involves applying state-of-the-art remote sensing, GIS, and GPS technologies to hydrology, agriculture, and natural resources. The research is highly interdisciplinary and collaborative involving experts from several disciplinary fields. For example, remotely sensed observations in the Visible and Infrared region of the Electromagnetic Spectrum are being used to conduct land cover and hydrologic change analyses, to generate crop yield maps, to improve crop management, and to identify and monitor invasive species. The observations in the Microwave region are being used to understand the soil water dynamics, including evapotranspiration in cropping systems, to improve predictions from hydrological and crop growth models via data assimilation. We utilize remotely sensed observations from ground-based, airborne, or satellite-based sensors. We conduct intensive field campaigns and use the datasets to develop and test our models.
