Abstract

Water management in lowland areas usually aims to keep water tables within a narrow range to avoid flooding and drought conditions. A common water management target parameter is the depth of the canal water table below the surrounding soil surface. We demonstrated a method that rapidly determines canal water table depth (CWD) from airborne LiDAR data. The water table elevation was measured as the minimum value determined in a grid of 100 m × 100 m applied to a 1 m × 1 m digital terrain model (DTM), and the soil surface was calculated as the median value of values in each grid cell. Results for areas in eastern Sumatra and West Kalimantan, Indonesia, were validated against 145 field measurements at the time of LiDAR data collection. LiDAR-derived CWD was found to be accurate within 0.25 m and 0.5 m for 86% and 99% of field measurements, respectively, with an R2 value of 0.74. We demonstrated the method for CWD conditions in a drained peatland area in Central Kalimantan, where we found CWD in the dry season of 2011 to be generally below −1.5 and often below −2.5 m indicating severely overdrained conditions. We concluded that airborne LiDAR can provide an efficient and rapid mapping tool of CWD at the time of LiDAR data collection, which can be cost-effective especially where LiDAR data or derived DTMs are already available. The method can be applied to any LiDAR-based DTM that represents a flat landscape that has open water bodies.

Highlights

  • Coastal lowland areas tend to be flat, with water tables that are near the soil surface

  • We explored a new approach that utilizes the capability of LiDAR data to detect both surface water level in canals and ground surface level near canals, allowing the determination of canal water table depth (CWD) below the land surface

  • CWD validation was conducted in several areas in eastern Sumatra and West Kalimantan (Figure 1), applying local digital terrain model (DTM) created from airborne LiDAR data collected in late 2017

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Summary

A New Method for Rapid Measurement of Canal

Water Table Depth Using Airborne LiDAR, with Application to Drained Peatlands in Indonesia.

Introduction
Study Areas and LiDAR DTM Data
Determining
Illustration of canal digitization from Landsat
Determining CWD
Grid Cell Size Considerations
CWD Validation
Validation of of CWD
Patterns in CWE in the Central Kalimantan Study Area
Patterns in CWD in the Central Kalimantan Study Area
Demonstration along cross cross section section A
Conclusions and Recommendations
Full Text
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