Abstract

There is a growing use of remote sensing observations for detecting and quantifying freshwater cyanobacteria populations, yet the inherent optical properties of these communities in natural settings, fundamental to bio-optical algorithms, are not well known. Towards bridging this knowledge gap, we measured a full complement of optical properties in western Lake Erie during cyanobacteria blooms in the summers of 2013 and 2014. Our measurements focus attention on the optical uniqueness of cyanobacteria blooms, which have consequences for remote sensing and bio-optical modeling. We found the cyanobacteria blooms in the western basin during our field work were dominated by Microcystis, while the waters in the adjacent central basin were dominated by Planktothrix. Chlorophyll concentrations ranged from 1 to over 135 ${\mu}g/L$ across the study area with the highest concentrations associated with Microcystis in the western basin. We observed large, amorphous colonial Microcystis structures in the bloom area characterized by high phytoplankton absorption and high scattering coefficients with a mean particle backscatter ratio at 443nm greater than 0.03, which is higher than other plankton types and more comparable to suspended inorganic sediments. While our samples contained mixtures of both, our analysis suggests high contributions to the measured scatter and backscatter coefficients from cyanobacteria. Our measurements provide new insights into the optical properties of cyanobacteria blooms, and indicate that current semi-analytic models are likely to have problems resolving a closed solution in these types of waters as many of our observations are beyond the range of existing model components. We believe that different algorithm or model approaches are needed for these conditions, specifically for phytoplankton absorption and particle backscatter components. From a remote sensing perspective, this presents a challenge not only in terms of a need for new algorithms, but also for determining when to apply the best algorithm for a given situation. These results are new in the sense that they represent a complete description of the optical properties of freshwater cyanobacteria blooms, and are likely to be representative of bloom conditions for other systems containing Microcystis cells and colonies.

Highlights

  • Freshwater lake systems provide critical roles as ecological habitats for many organisms, a source of drinking water for human and animal life, and as biogeochemical components in Earth system element cycling (Tranvik et al, 2009)

  • The number of stations assigned to each region was uneven: N = 27 (MB); N = 14 (CB); N = 7 (DR)

  • To achieve higher backscatter ratios we found in a mixed assemblage of organic and inorganic particles, the organic contribution to backscatter must be higher and above the values for the inorganic particles (i.e., >0.04)

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Summary

Introduction

Freshwater lake systems provide critical roles as ecological habitats for many organisms, a source of drinking water for human and animal life, and as biogeochemical components in Earth system element cycling (Tranvik et al, 2009). These systems respond to environmental change over short and long time scales, which can alter ecosystem dynamics with profound effects (Paerl et al, 2011; Kane et al, 2014). The quality of remote sensing products is critical to interpreting ecological trends and linkages to underlying drivers This in large part depends on understanding the optical properties of a given water body. Freshwater cHABs often exhibit unique optical properties, owing in part to enhanced backscatter properties of gas vacuoles within the cells (Matthews and Bernard, 2013) and from amorphous colony structures that aggregate into floating mats (Paerl and Ustach, 1982; Hu et al, 2010; Kudela et al, 2015)

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