A Remote Sensing View of the 2020 Extreme Lake-Expansion Flood Event into the Peace–Athabasca Delta Floodplain—Implications for the Future SWOT Mission

Author:

Desrochers Nicolas M.1ORCID,Peters Daniel L.2ORCID,Siles Gabriela1,Cauvier Charest Elizabeth1,Trudel Mélanie1,Leconte Robert1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Civil Engineering and Building, University of Sherbrooke, Sherbrooke, QC J1K 2R1, Canada

2. Watershed Hydrology and Ecology Research Division, Environment and Climate Change Canada, University of Victoria Queenswood Campus, Victoria, BC V8N 1V8, Canada

Abstract

The Peace–Athabasca Delta (PAD) in western Canada is one of the largest inland deltas in the world. Flooding caused by the expansion of lakes beyond normal shorelines occurred during the summer of 2020 and provided a unique opportunity to evaluate the capabilities of remote sensing platforms to map surface water expansion into vegetated landscape with complex surface connectivity. Firstly, multi-source remotely sensed data via satellites were used to create a temporal reconstruction of the event spanning May to September. Optical synthetic aperture radar (SAR) and altimeter data were used to reconstruct surface water area and elevation as seen from space. Lastly, temporal water surface area and level data obtained from the existing satellites and hydrometric stations were used as input data in the CNES Large-Scale SWOT Simulator, which provided an overview of the newly launched SWOT satellite ability to monitor such flood events. The results show a 25% smaller water surface area for optical instruments compared to SAR. Simulations show that SWOT would have greatly increased the spatio-temporal understanding of the flood dynamics with complete PAD coverage three to four times per month. Overall, seasonal vegetation growth was a major obstacle for water surface area retrieval, especially for optical sensors.

Funder

Canadian Space Agency

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences

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