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National news
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News story about
Moran's research (Dec. 2002) |
Tucson Scientist Wins Research
Honor By Marcia
Wood February 12, 2003
BELTSVILLE, Md., Feb. 12Hydrologist M. Susan Moran
of Tucson, Ariz., has been named an Outstanding Senior Research Scientist
of 2002" by the Agricultural Research
Service (ARS) for her pioneering research designed to help ranchers,
wildlife specialists and water managers more easily use eye-in-the-sky imagery
captured by orbiting satellites or low-flying airplanes. ARS is the chief
scientific research agency of the U.S.
Department of Agriculture.
Moran, a hydrologist, directs a team of more than 40 scientists,
technicians and others at ARS Southwest Watershed Research Center in
Tucson and Tombstone, Ariz.
Moran and other top ARS scientists were honored at an awards
ceremony today at the agencys Henry
A. Wallace Beltsville Agricultural Research Center here. Moran received a
plaque, a cash award and additional research funds.
In her laboratory, and at field sites throughout Arizona, Moran
has developed innovative ways to harness the speed and power of desktop
computers to analyze remote sensing imagery gathered by cameras and sensors
mounted aboard satellites and aircraft. The computerized, math-based models
that Moran and colleagues develop enable users to determine the present and
possible future condition of rangeland grasses, for example.
The SEHEM model, short for Spatially Explicit
Hydro-Ecological Model, that Moran and colleagues developed uses weather
data and information about grasses to produce customized color maps on a
desktop computer and color printer. Ranchers and others can use the maps to
estimate where, and how much, forage might be available for hungry cattle and
wildlife to graze in the coming months.
Dr. Moran is internationally known for her high-tech,
leading-edge research on how information gathered by the three major types of
remote sensing--radar, thermal, and visible infrared--can be used to improve
management of plants, soil and water, said Acting ARS Administrator
Edward B. Knipling.
Moran has presented results of her research at major national
and international scientific meetings. She joined ARS in 1984 and has been
research leader at the Southwest Watershed Research Center since 2000. In
addition, Moran is an adjunct professor in the Department of Soil, Water, and
Environmental Science at the University of Arizona, Tucson. She has served on
many research teams organized by the National Aeronautics and Space
Administration.
Moran received her bachelor of science degree from San Diego
State University in 1976 in geography, her master of science degree from the
University of California at Santa Barbara in 1982, also in geography, and her
doctorate from the University of Arizona at Tucson in 1990 in soil and water
science. |