1 / 23

REMOTE SENSING APPLICATIONS FOR DIRECT MEASUREMENTS OF WATER QUALITY

REMOTE SENSING APPLICATIONS FOR DIRECT MEASUREMENTS OF WATER QUALITY. Ted Engman SAIC, Hydrological Sciences Branch, NASA/GSFC. POTENTIAL REMOTE SENSING APPLICATIONS FOR WATER QUALITY. LAKES, RESERVOIRS AND PONDS NONPOINT SOURCE POLLUTION BEACHES AND RECEIVING WATERS.

Download Presentation

REMOTE SENSING APPLICATIONS FOR DIRECT MEASUREMENTS OF WATER QUALITY

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. REMOTE SENSING APPLICATIONS FOR DIRECT MEASUREMENTS OF WATER QUALITY Ted Engman SAIC, Hydrological Sciences Branch, NASA/GSFC

  2. POTENTIAL REMOTE SENSING APPLICATIONS FOR WATER QUALITY LAKES, RESERVOIRS AND PONDS NONPOINT SOURCE POLLUTION BEACHES AND RECEIVING WATERS

  3. Satellite Remote Sensing Can Measure a Number of Water Quality Constituents • Sediment concentration, TSS • Chlorophyll concentration • Surface temperature • Trophic index • Nutrients via surrogates (total P) • ??? Via surrogates

  4. Lakes, Reservoirs and Ponds • Cannot measure WQ directly • Infer WQ with empirical models • Models based on changes in reflectance caused by material in the water

  5. Lake Sedimentation

  6. Quantifying Measurements of Sediment Concentrations • Develop empirical relationship between sediment concentration and reflectance TSS = 78.56 – 554.23*MSS4 + 149.22*MSS5 + 1355.02*MSS6 - 187.38*MSS7 • (r2 = 0.95)

  7. Rapid Evaluation of Regional Water Quality (SDT) of Lakes

  8. Rapid Evaluation of Local Water Quality (SDT) of Ponds

  9. Quantifying Chlorophyll Concentrations • Similar empirical approach • Log C = a – b(TM2/TM3)

  10. MERIS FR Image Sept.1 2009

  11. Chesapeake Bay Chlorophyll

  12. Percent of countries where significant trends in chlorophyll concentrations could be identified in at least some proportion of their coastal waters. Percent of all grid cells covered by our global near-coastal-zone buffer (10-100 km off shore) where trends in chlorophyll concentrations between 1998 and 2007 were either absent, positive, or negative

  13. Advantages to the Remote Sensing Approach • Can sample all Lakes, Reservoirs & Ponds • Initial Classification – Lakes that Are OK and Those That Need a Closer Look • Transferability of Empirical Relationships • Seasonal Effects • “See” Entire Lake, Spatial Patterns – Optimize Sample Strategy in Time and Space • Frequent, inexpensive monitoring • Historical analysis

  14. Disadvantages to the Remote Sensing Approach • Cannot Measure directly • Limited to What We Can Quantify • Point Precision Lacking • Clouds – but really not an issue

  15. Non Point Source Pollution is a Land Cover/Land Use IssueMapping and Monitoring Land Cover/Land Use • Traditional Tradeoffs • Spatial Resolution • Temporal Resolution • Spectral Resolution • Cost

  16. Comparison of Spatial Resolution

  17. Spatial and Spectral Trades Each Image has features that the others do not have Choice depends upon application

  18. Identification of buffer zones

  19. Beaches and Receiving Waters • Enhance monitoring programs • Extent, transport direction and source of contamination • Improve modeling of waste field movement, mixing zone model calibration and validation

  20. Location, Shape and Extent of Plume • Compliance with NPDES permit • Outfall locations • Calibrating and validating near-field and far-field models

  21. Issues, No Longer Calibration Geometric correction Calculating reflectance Atmospheric corrections Computer systems Display of products / results Cost of data

  22. Water Quality Algorithm Development Workshop, June 2009 GEO Water Quality Working Group Workshop Objective Develop an action plan to advance algorithm development and implementation in providing synoptic management-relevant water quality information of inland and coastal waters using global and/or regional algorithms.

More Related