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Major Land Uses: Glossary

Definitions, sources of data, and estimation techniques have varied little over time in the Major Land Uses series. The following definitions and explanations of the data are for the most recent year, but generally apply to all previous years as well.

Estimates of major land uses for 2002 are the latest in a series of land use inventories based on available statistics conducted by the Economic Research Service (ERS) and its predecessor agencies within the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA). This series, which began in 1945, is comparable in categories and area coverage. Part of the series—cropland used for crops—is consistent back to 1910 on a yearly basis. These periodic inventories are useful because even though numerous public agencies develop land use data, no other single agency, except ERS, accounts for the use of all land (public and private for all 50 States) in the United States. The inventories provide a framework within which changes in the supply and demand for land for agricultural and other purposes can be measured and analyzed.

The estimates, with few exceptions, were synthesized or otherwise adapted, modified, or adjusted from available data, rather than compiled and used exactly as developed by source agencies. This process is necessary because land use data, regardless of origin or utility for specific objectives, have limitations for comprehensive inventory purposes. The data are typically obtained from surveys differing greatly in scope, methods, definitions, and other characteristics. The individual sources account for only one or a few uses and for only a limited part of the total land area. The available data contain conflicts and overlaps that must be reconciled or removed.

Definitions

(Names correspond to the spreadsheet file names. Categories in upper case are major uses, while those in lower case are subcategories of the major uses.)

CROPLAND—Total cropland includes five components: cropland harvested, crop failure, cultivated summer fallow, cropland used only for pasture, and idle cropland. The estimate of total cropland in 2002 includes total cropland as reported by the 2002 Census of Agriculture (NASS, 2004) plus an upward adjustment to conform to data on principal crops harvested reported by USDA's National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS) for 2002.

Cropland used for crops—Three of the cropland acreage components—cropland harvested, crop failure, and cultivated summer fallow—are collectively termed cropland used for crops, or the land input to crop production. Regional acreage in these components are developed annually in a separate but coordinated series. The annual estimates of cropland harvested are based on both census data and the series on principal crops harvested maintained by NASS. Annual estimates of crop failure are based on differences in planted and harvested acreage of principal crops from the NASS series. Annual estimates of cultivated summer fallow historically have been based on fragmentary data from a variety of sources. More recently they have been based on data from the Census of Agriculture and unpublished NASS data.

Cropland harvested includes row crops and closely sown crops; tree fruits, small fruits, and tree nuts; vegetables; other minor crops and hay. In 2002 about 4 percent of this acreage was double cropped (double cropped acres were only counted once).

Crop failure consists mainly of the acreage on which crops failed because of weather, insects, and diseases, but includes some land not harvested due to lack of labor, low market prices, or other factors. The acreage planted to cover and soil improvement crops not intended for harvest is excluded. In 2002 crops failed on about 5 percent of the acreage planted.

Cultivated summer fallow refers to cropland in sub-humid regions of the Western United States cultivated for a season or more to control weeds and accumulate moisture before small grains are planted. This practice is optional in some areas but necessary in the drier cropland areas of the West. Other types of fallow, such as cropland planted to soil improvement crops but not harvested, and cropland left idle all year, are not included in cultivated summer fallow.

Cropland used only for pasture generally is considered in the long-term crop rotation, as being tilled, planted in field crops, and then re-seeded to pasture at varying intervals. However, some cropland pasture is marginal for crop uses and may remain in pasture indefinitely. This category also includes land that was used for pasture before crops reach maturity and some land used for pasture that could have been cropped without additional improvement. Cropland pasture and permanent grassland pasture have not always been clearly distinguished in agricultural surveys.

Idle cropland includes land in cover and soil improvement crops and completely idle cropland. Some cropland is idle each year for various physical and economic reasons. Acreage diverted from crops to soil-conserving uses under Federal farm programs is included in this component. Cropland enrolled in the Federal Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) is included in idle cropland.

GRASSLAND PASTURE and RANGE—Grassland pasture and range consists of all open land used primarily for pasture and grazing. It includes shrub and brush land types of pasture and grazing land such as sagebrush and scattered mesquite; all tame and native grasses; legumes; and other forage used for pasture or grazing.

Because of the diversity in vegetative composition, grassland pasture and range are not always clearly distinguishable from other types of pasture and range. At one extreme, permanent grassland may merge with cropland pasture; at the other, grassland may intermingle or form transitional areas with forested grazing land.

No single agency, other than ERS, accounts for all public and private land used for pasture and range. The estimates in this report are composites of data from the Census of Agriculture, Bureau of Land Management, U.S. Forest Service, Natural Resource Conservation Service and several other Federal agencies.

FOREST LAND—Forest land, as defined by the U.S. Forest Service, includes land at least 10 percent of which is stocked by trees of any size, or land formerly having had such tree cover that will be naturally or artificially regenerated. Forest land includes transition zones, such as areas between heavily forested and nonforested lands that are at least 10 percent stocked with forest trees and forest areas adjacent to urban and built-up lands. The total includes pinyon-juniper and chaparral areas in the West and afforested areas. There are a number of components to total forest land, a few of which are described below.

The U.S. Forest Service inventoried 749 million acres of forest land in 2002, 98 million of which were estimated to be in the Major Land Use Category of Special Uses, leaving 642 million in the MLU defined category of Forest-Use Land. These special uses include parks, wildlife areas, and similar special-purpose areas. Similar exclusions of forested land in special uses were made in earlier reports. The extent of the exclusion in each Census year is indicated in a footnote in Table 8. Although this helps eliminate double counting of land in multiple uses, it was not feasible to eliminate all overlap that exists between forest land and special use land.

The Forest Service has historically conducted a continuous, rather than periodic, survey of forest resources. At any point in time, the forest area data for individual States may vary in age by several years. This system may adversely affect estimates of other areas, especially pasture and range. However, this system provides a good overall measure of forest area and is useful in explaining changes and trends in land use. Forest land receives less emphasis than cropland and pasture in the Major Land Uses report series because the U.S. Forest Service periodically surveys, analyzes, and provides reports (containing considerable detail) on the Nation's forest resources.

Forest-use land grazed—Forested pasture and range consist mainly of forest, brush grown pasture, arid woodlands, and other areas within forested areas that have grass or other forage growth. The total acreage of forested grazing land includes woodland pasture in farms plus estimates of forested grazing land not in farms. For many States, the estimates include significant areas grazed only lightly or sporadically. The Census of Agriculture and the U.S. Forest Service are the principal sources of data. Historical data from these and other sources have assisted in the development of approximations. The residual of total forest land minus forest-se land grazed is defined as forest-use land not grazed.

SPECIAL USES—Special uses in the Major Land Uses report series include areas in highway, road, and railroad rights-of-way and airports; Federal and State parks, wilderness areas, and wildlife areas; national defense and industrial uses; and urban areas. Estimates of the area in special uses were developed because some of these uses affect the supply of agricultural land and all help account for changes in land use.

Urban areas as defined by the Census Bureau are densely-populated areas with at least 50,000 people ("urbanized areas") and densely-populated areas with 2,500 to 50,000 people ("urban clusters").

Rural transportation uses include highways, roads, and railroad rights-of-way, plus airport facilities.

Rural parks and wildlife areas include Federal and State parks, wilderness areas, and wildlife refuges.

Farmsteads, farm roads, and lanes plus other miscellaneous farmland are included in special uses.

OTHER or MISCELLANEOUS LAND—Includes miscellaneous uses such as industrial and commercial sites in rural areas, cemeteries, golf courses, mining areas, quarry sites, marshes, swamps, sand dunes, bare rocks, deserts, tundra, rural residential, and other unclassified land.

For further definitions see more Definitions and Explanation of the Data.

 

For more information, contact: Cynthia Nickerson

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Updated date: December 21, 2007