Abstract

The structure and functioning of coral reef coastal zones are currently coping with an increasing variety of threats, thereby altering the coastal spatial patterns at an accelerated pace. Understanding and predicting the evolution of these highly valuable coastal ecosystems require reliable and frequent mapping and monitoring of both inhabited terrestrial and marine areas at the individual tree and coral colony spatial scale. The very high spatial resolution (VHR) mapping that was recently spearheaded by WorldView-2 (WV2) sensor with 2 m and 0.5 m multispectral (MS) and panchromatic (Pan) bands has the potential to address this burning issue. The objective of this study was to classify nine terrestrial and twelve marine patch classes with respect to spatial resolution enhancement and coast integrity using eight bands of the WV2 sensor on a coastal zone of Moorea Island, French Polynesia. The contribution of the novel WV2 spectral bands towards classification accuracy at 2 m and 0.5 m were tested using traditional and innovative Pan-sharpening techniques. The land and water classes were examined both separately and combinedly. All spectral combinations that were built only with the novel WV2 bands systematically increased the overall classification accuracy of the standard four band classification. The overall best contribution was attributed to the coastal-red edge-near infrared (NIR) 2 combination (Kappagain = 0.0287), which significantly increased the fleshy and encrusting algae (User’s Accuracygain = 18.18%) class. However, the addition of the yellow-NIR2 combination dramatically impacted the hard coral/algae patches class (Producer’s Accuracyloss = −20.88%). Enhancement of the spatial resolution reduced the standard classification accuracy, depending on the Pan-sharpening technique. The proposed composite method (local maximum) provided better overall results than the commonly used sensor method (systematic). However, the sensor technique produced the highest contribution to the hard coral thicket (PAgain = 30.36%) class with the coastal-red edge-NIR2 combination. Partitioning the coast into its terrestrial and aquatic components lowered the overall standard classification accuracy, while strongly enhancing the hard coral bommie class with the coastal-NIR2 combination (UAgain = 40%) and the green-coastal Normalized Difference Ratio (UAgain = 11.06%). VHR spaceborne remote sensing has the potential to gain substantial innovative insights into the evolution of tropical coastal ecosystems from local to regional scales, to predict the influence of anthropogenic and climate changes and to help design optimized management and conservation frameworks.

Highlights

  • Spatial interfaces lying between land and marine areas are critical zones, which provide ecological functions crucial to human populations, such as disturbance regulation, water supply, nutrient cycling and waste treatment [1]

  • Steps need to be taken to understand the spatial patterns of ecosystem units spanning the seamless coast, so that the upstream area is managed in a way beneficial to the downstream coral reefs [5,6]

  • We examined whether the eight-band WV2 satellite is able to classify the tropical coastal zone from the volcanic ridge to the outer reef through an urbanized coastal fringe in a clear water environment

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Spatial interfaces lying between land and marine areas are critical zones, which provide ecological functions crucial to human populations, such as disturbance regulation, water supply, nutrient cycling and waste treatment [1]. Coral reefs and mangroves, consisting of the tropical part of the transitional land-to-sea area, are assessed to be the most valuable ecosystems worldwide that ensure recreation and waste treatment services, respectively [2]. Anthropogenic pressures, originating from both land and sea areas, have increasingly affected coral reefs and weakened the positive fluxes (proto-cooperation and mutualism) between ecosystem units, shifting them to lower complex states. Steps need to be taken to understand the spatial patterns of ecosystem units spanning the seamless coast, so that the upstream area is managed in a way beneficial to the downstream coral reefs [5,6]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call