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ARS Home » Midwest Area » Ames, Iowa » National Laboratory for Agriculture and The Environment » Agroecosystems Management Research » Research » Publications at this Location » Publication #380737

Research Project: Agroecosystem Benefits from the Development and Application of New Management Technologies in Agricultural Watersheds

Location: Agroecosystems Management Research

Title: Agricultural land use by field: Minnesota 2010-2019

Author
item James, David
item Tomer, Mark

Submitted to: Ag Data Commons
Publication Type: Database / Dataset
Publication Acceptance Date: 12/21/2020
Publication Date: 12/28/2020
Citation: James, D.E., Tomer, M.D. 2020. Agricultural land use by field: Minnesota 2010-2019. Ag Data Commons. https://doi.org/10.15482/USDA.ADC/1520626.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.15482/USDA.ADC/1520626

Interpretive Summary:

Technical Abstract: Improving the quality of water discharged from agricultural watersheds requires comprehensive and adaptive approaches for planning and implementing conservation practices. These measures will need to consider landscape hydrology, distributions of soil types, land cover, and crop distributions in an integrated manner. The two most consistent challenges to these efforts will be consistency and reliability of data, and the capacity to translate conservation planning from watershed to farm and field scales. The translation of scale is required because, while conservation practices can be planned based on a watershed scale framework, they must be implemented by landowners in specific fields and riparian sites that are under private ownership. To support these goals, it has been necessary to develop planning approaches, high-resolution spatial datasets, and conservation practice assessment tools that will allow the agricultural and conservation communities to characterize and mitigate these challenges. The field boundary dataset represents a spatial framework for assembling and maintaining geospatial data to support conservation planning at the scale where conservation practices are implemented, for the State of Iowa. This field boundaries dataset has been assembled to support field-scale agricultural conservation planning using the USDA/ARS Agricultural Conservation Planning Framework (ACPF). The original data used to create this database are the pre-2008 Farm Bill FSA common land unit (CLU) datasets. A portion of metadata found herein pertains to USDA Farm Service Agency CLU data. The remaining information has been developed to reflect the repurposing of the data in its aggregated form. It is important to note that all USDA programmatic and ownership information that was associated with the original data have been removed. Beyond that, these data have been extensively edited to reflect crop-specific land use, and no longer reflects discrete ownership patterns.