Author:
Jupp DLB,Kirk JTO,Harris GP
Abstract
The advantages of airborne scanning for the detection, identification and mapping of algal
species, cyanobacteria and associated water parameters (such as turbidity) can be realized if
current research outcomes are developed into operational methods based on images with high
spectral resolution. Evidence for this has become available through data obtained recently in
Australia from the Compact Airborne Spectrographic Imager. This paper shows how pigments
associated with cyanobacteria are detectable, even in the very turbid waters typical of eastern
Australia. It demonstrates how, if the waterbodies and their constituents can be characterized
by a programme of field and laboratory measurement, current processing techniques and models
allow the concentrations of different constituents (algae and particles) in the photic zone to be
estimated and mapped. The challenge for operational remote sensing of optical water quality
in Australia (and throughout the world) is seen to have two components. One is to provide
an effective characterization of the target inland and adjacent coastal waters and the other is to
streamline the data analysis to provide maps of water properties in the time and cost frameworks
required for operational use.
Subject
Ecology,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Oceanography
Cited by
97 articles.
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