Remote sensing of river delta inundation: Exploiting the potential of coarse spatial resolution, temporally-dense MODIS time series

River deltas belong to the most densely settled places on earth. Although they only account for 5% of the global land surface, over 550 million people live in deltas. These preferred livelihood locations, which feature flat terrain, fertile alluvial soils, access to fluvial and marine resources, a r...

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Main Authors: Kuenzer, C, Klein, I, Ullmann, T, Georgiou, EF, Baumhauer, R, Dech, S
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: eScholarship, University of California 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://escholarship.org/uc/item/90g5t99c
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spelling ftcdlib:oai:escholarship.org/ark:/13030/qt90g5t99c 2023-05-15T17:09:31+02:00 Remote sensing of river delta inundation: Exploiting the potential of coarse spatial resolution, temporally-dense MODIS time series Kuenzer, C Klein, I Ullmann, T Georgiou, EF Baumhauer, R Dech, S 8516 - 8542 2015-01-01 application/pdf https://escholarship.org/uc/item/90g5t99c unknown eScholarship, University of California qt90g5t99c https://escholarship.org/uc/item/90g5t99c public Remote Sensing, vol 7, iss 7 Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience Geomatic Engineering Classical Physics article 2015 ftcdlib 2021-04-16T07:11:40Z River deltas belong to the most densely settled places on earth. Although they only account for 5% of the global land surface, over 550 million people live in deltas. These preferred livelihood locations, which feature flat terrain, fertile alluvial soils, access to fluvial and marine resources, a rich wetland biodiversity and other advantages are, however, threatened by numerous internal and external processes. Socio-economic development, urbanization, climate change induced sea level rise, as well as flood pulse changes due to upstream water diversion all lead to changes in these highly dynamic systems. A thorough understanding of a river delta's general setting and intra-annual as well as long-term dynamic is therefore crucial for an informed management of natural resources. Here, remote sensing can play a key role in analyzing and monitoring these vast areas at a global scale. The goal of this study is to demonstrate the potential of intra-annual time series analyses at dense temporal, but coarse spatial resolution for inundation characterization in five river deltas located in four different countries. Based on 250 m MODIS reflectance data we analyze inundation dynamics in four densely populated Asian river deltas-namely the Yellow River Delta (China), the Mekong Delta (Vietnam), the Irrawaddy Delta (Myanmar), and the Ganges-Brahmaputra (Bangladesh, India)-as well as one very contrasting delta: the nearly uninhabited polar Mackenzie Delta Region in northwestern Canada for the complete time span of one year (2013). A complex processing chain of water surface derivation on a daily basis allows the generation of intra-annual time series, which indicate inundation duration in each of the deltas. Our analyses depict distinct inundation patterns within each of the deltas, which can be attributed to processes such as overland flooding, irrigation agriculture, aquaculture, or snowmelt and thermokarst processes. Clear differences between mid-latitude, subtropical, and polar deltas are illustrated, and the advantages and limitations of the approach for inundation derivation are discussed. Article in Journal/Newspaper Mackenzie Delta Thermokarst University of California: eScholarship Canada
institution Open Polar
collection University of California: eScholarship
op_collection_id ftcdlib
language unknown
topic Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience
Geomatic Engineering
Classical Physics
spellingShingle Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience
Geomatic Engineering
Classical Physics
Kuenzer, C
Klein, I
Ullmann, T
Georgiou, EF
Baumhauer, R
Dech, S
Remote sensing of river delta inundation: Exploiting the potential of coarse spatial resolution, temporally-dense MODIS time series
topic_facet Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience
Geomatic Engineering
Classical Physics
description River deltas belong to the most densely settled places on earth. Although they only account for 5% of the global land surface, over 550 million people live in deltas. These preferred livelihood locations, which feature flat terrain, fertile alluvial soils, access to fluvial and marine resources, a rich wetland biodiversity and other advantages are, however, threatened by numerous internal and external processes. Socio-economic development, urbanization, climate change induced sea level rise, as well as flood pulse changes due to upstream water diversion all lead to changes in these highly dynamic systems. A thorough understanding of a river delta's general setting and intra-annual as well as long-term dynamic is therefore crucial for an informed management of natural resources. Here, remote sensing can play a key role in analyzing and monitoring these vast areas at a global scale. The goal of this study is to demonstrate the potential of intra-annual time series analyses at dense temporal, but coarse spatial resolution for inundation characterization in five river deltas located in four different countries. Based on 250 m MODIS reflectance data we analyze inundation dynamics in four densely populated Asian river deltas-namely the Yellow River Delta (China), the Mekong Delta (Vietnam), the Irrawaddy Delta (Myanmar), and the Ganges-Brahmaputra (Bangladesh, India)-as well as one very contrasting delta: the nearly uninhabited polar Mackenzie Delta Region in northwestern Canada for the complete time span of one year (2013). A complex processing chain of water surface derivation on a daily basis allows the generation of intra-annual time series, which indicate inundation duration in each of the deltas. Our analyses depict distinct inundation patterns within each of the deltas, which can be attributed to processes such as overland flooding, irrigation agriculture, aquaculture, or snowmelt and thermokarst processes. Clear differences between mid-latitude, subtropical, and polar deltas are illustrated, and the advantages and limitations of the approach for inundation derivation are discussed.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Kuenzer, C
Klein, I
Ullmann, T
Georgiou, EF
Baumhauer, R
Dech, S
author_facet Kuenzer, C
Klein, I
Ullmann, T
Georgiou, EF
Baumhauer, R
Dech, S
author_sort Kuenzer, C
title Remote sensing of river delta inundation: Exploiting the potential of coarse spatial resolution, temporally-dense MODIS time series
title_short Remote sensing of river delta inundation: Exploiting the potential of coarse spatial resolution, temporally-dense MODIS time series
title_full Remote sensing of river delta inundation: Exploiting the potential of coarse spatial resolution, temporally-dense MODIS time series
title_fullStr Remote sensing of river delta inundation: Exploiting the potential of coarse spatial resolution, temporally-dense MODIS time series
title_full_unstemmed Remote sensing of river delta inundation: Exploiting the potential of coarse spatial resolution, temporally-dense MODIS time series
title_sort remote sensing of river delta inundation: exploiting the potential of coarse spatial resolution, temporally-dense modis time series
publisher eScholarship, University of California
publishDate 2015
url https://escholarship.org/uc/item/90g5t99c
op_coverage 8516 - 8542
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre Mackenzie Delta
Thermokarst
genre_facet Mackenzie Delta
Thermokarst
op_source Remote Sensing, vol 7, iss 7
op_relation qt90g5t99c
https://escholarship.org/uc/item/90g5t99c
op_rights public
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