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Surface Water Dynamics from Space:A Round Robin Intercomparison of Using Optical and SAR High-Resolution Satellite Observations for Regional Surface Water Detection

Authors :
Tottrup, Christian
Druce, Daniel
Meyer, Rasmus Probst
Christensen, Mads
Riffler, Michael
Dulleck, Bjoern
Rastner, Philipp
Jupova, Katerina
Sokoup, Tomas
Haag, Arjen
Cordeiro, Mauricio C R
Martinez, Jean-Michel
Franke, Jonas
Schwarz, Maximilian
Vanthof, Victoria
Liu, Suxia
Zhou, Haowei
Marzi, David
Rudiyanto, Rudiyanto
Thompson, Mark
Hiestermann, Jens
Alemohammad, Hamed
Masse, Antoine
Sannier, Christophe
Wangchuk, Sonam
Schumann, Guy
Giustarini, Laura
Hallowes, Jason
Markert, Kel
Paganini, Marc
University of Zurich
Earth and Climate
Source :
Tottrup, C, Druce, D, Meyer, R P, Christensen, M, Riffler, M, Dulleck, B, Rastner, P, Jupova, K, Sokoup, T, Haag, A, Cordeiro, M C R, Martinez, J M, Franke, J, Schwarz, M, Vanthof, V, Liu, S, Zhou, H, Marzi, D, Rudiyanto, R, Thompson, M, Hiestermann, J, Alemohammad, H, Masse, A, Sannier, C, Wangchuk, S, Schumann, G, Giustarini, L, Hallowes, J, Markert, K & Paganini, M 2022, ' Surface Water Dynamics from Space : A Round Robin Intercomparison of Using Optical and SAR High-Resolution Satellite Observations for Regional Surface Water Detection ', Remote Sensing, vol. 14, no. 10, 2410, pp. 1-21 . https://doi.org/10.3390/rs14102410, Remote Sensing, 14(10):2410, 1-21. Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute (MDPI), Remote Sensing; Volume 14; Issue 10; Pages: 2410
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Climate change, increasing population and changes in land use are all rapidly driving the need to be able to better understand surface water dynamics. The targets set by the United Nations under Sustainable Development Goal 6 in relation to freshwater ecosystems also make accurate surface water monitoring increasingly vital. However, the last decades have seen a steady decline in in situ hydrological monitoring and the availability of the growing volume of environmental data from free and open satellite systems is increasingly being recognized as an essential tool for largescale monitoring of water resources. The scientific literature holds many promising studies on satellite-based surface-water mapping, but a systematic evaluation has been lacking. Therefore, a round robin exercise was organized to conduct an intercomparison of 14 different satellite-based approaches for monitoring inland surface dynamics with Sentinel-1, Sentinel-2, and Landsat 8 imagery. The objective was to achieve a better understanding of the pros and cons of different sensors and models for surface water detection and monitoring. Results indicate that, while using a single sensor approach (applying either optical or radar satellite data) can provide comprehensive results for very specific localities, a dual sensor approach (combining data from both optical and radar satellites) is the most effective way to undertake largescale national and regional surface water mapping across bioclimatic gradients.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20724292
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Tottrup, C, Druce, D, Meyer, R P, Christensen, M, Riffler, M, Dulleck, B, Rastner, P, Jupova, K, Sokoup, T, Haag, A, Cordeiro, M C R, Martinez, J M, Franke, J, Schwarz, M, Vanthof, V, Liu, S, Zhou, H, Marzi, D, Rudiyanto, R, Thompson, M, Hiestermann, J, Alemohammad, H, Masse, A, Sannier, C, Wangchuk, S, Schumann, G, Giustarini, L, Hallowes, J, Markert, K & Paganini, M 2022, ' Surface Water Dynamics from Space : A Round Robin Intercomparison of Using Optical and SAR High-Resolution Satellite Observations for Regional Surface Water Detection ', Remote Sensing, vol. 14, no. 10, 2410, pp. 1-21 . https://doi.org/10.3390/rs14102410, Remote Sensing, 14(10):2410, 1-21. Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute (MDPI), Remote Sensing; Volume 14; Issue 10; Pages: 2410
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6b7ce1b8d0cbedab0f7055780922eca2