Acres of Prime Farmland Used as Pastureland, 1987
Description
This dot density map shows the total number of
1987 prime farmland acres used as Pastureland.
Dots are aggregated by and placed randomly
within each 8-digit hydrologic unit. Each dot
represents 10,000 acres. Areas with 95% or more
Federal area are shaded gray. There are 37.0
million acres of prime farmland used as
pastureland.
Cautions for this Product:
This map does not include prime farmland that is
not used as Pastureland or Pastureland that is
not located on prime farmland. This map may not
be used for site-specific information. Data are
not collected on Federal land. Data are not
available for Alaska or the Pacific Basin. Data
for Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands is
shown by 6-digit hydrologic unit.
Sources
Source:
National Resources Inventory, 1997
Distributor:
USDA-NRCS-RIAD
Reliability:
NRI sample data are generally reliable at the
95% confidence interval for state and certain
broad substate area analyses. Generally,
analyses that aggregate data points by smaller
geographic areas and/or more specific criteria
result in fewer data points for each aggregation
and therefore less reliable estimates. NRI maps
reflect national patterns rather than site-
specific information.
Layers
Aggregate Layer:
Cross of State with 8 Digit Hydrologic Units and
Federal Land
Other Layers Displayed:
States, Rivers
Definitions
Federal land:
A land ownership class designating land that is
owned by the Federal Government. It does not
include, for example, trust lands administered
by the Bureau of Indian Affairs nor Tennessee
Valley Authority (TVA) land. No data are
collected for any year that land is in this
ownership. [NRI-97]
Hydrologic units:
A hierarchical system developed by the U.S.
Geological Survey that divides the United States
and the Caribbean into 21 major regions, 222
subregions, 352 accounting units, and further
subdivided into 2,150 cataloging units that
delineate river basins having drainage areas
usually greater than 700 square miles. [USGS]
Pastureland and Native Pasture:
A Land Cover/Use category of land managed
primarily for the production of introduced or
native forage plants for livestock grazing.
Pastureland may consist of a single species in a
pure stand, a grass mixture or a grass-legume
mixture. Management usually consists of
cultural treatments-fertilization, weed control,
reseeding, or renovation and control of
grazing. (For the NRI, includes land that has a
vegetative cover of grasses, legumes, and/or
forbs, regardless of whether or not it is being
grazed by livestock.) [NRI-97]
Prime farmland:
Land that has the best combination of physical
and chemical characteristics for producing food,
feed, forage, fiber, and oilseed crops and is
also available for these uses. It has the soil
quality, growing season, and moisture supply
needed to produce economically sustained high
yields of crops when treated and managed
according to acceptable farming methods,
including water management. In general, prime
farmlands have an adequate and dependable water
supply from precipitation or irrigation, a
favorable temperature and growing season,
acceptable acidity or alkalinity, acceptable
salt and sodium content, and few or no rocks.
They are permeable to water and air. Prime
farmlands are not excessively erodible or
saturated with water for a long period of time,
and they either do not flood frequently or are
protected from flooding.[SSM, USDA Handbook No.
18, October 1993]
Product Information
Product ID:
5963
Production Date:
2/9/01
Product Type:
Map
For additional information
contact the Resources Inventory and Assessment Division.
Please include the Product ID you are inquiring about.
nri@wdc.usda.gov
or 1400 Independence Avenue SW - P.O. Box 2890 -
Washington D.C. 20013. If you use our analysis products,
please be aware of our disclaimer.
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