Abstract
Anthropogenic activities in coastal regions are endangering marine ecosystems. Coastal waters classified as case-II waters are especially complex due to the presence of different constituents. Recent advances in remote sensing technology have enabled to capture the spatiotemporal variability of the constituents in coastal waters. The present study evaluates the potential of remote sensing using machine learning techniques, for improving water quality estimation over the coastal waters of Hong Kong. Concentrations of suspended solids (SS), chlorophyll-a (Chl-a), and turbidity were estimated with several machine learning techniques including Artificial Neural Network (ANN), Random Forest (RF), Cubist regression (CB), and Support Vector Regression (SVR). Landsat (5,7,8) reflectance data were compared with in situ reflectance data to evaluate the performance of machine learning models. The highest accuracies of the water quality indicators were achieved by ANN for both, in situ reflectance data (89%-Chl-a, 93%-SS, and 82%-turbidity) and satellite data (91%-Chl-a, 92%-SS, and 85%-turbidity. The water quality parameters retrieved by the ANN model was further compared to those retrieved by “standard Case-2 Regional/Coast Colour” (C2RCC) processing chain model C2RCC-Nets. The root mean square errors (RMSEs) for estimating SS and Chl-a were 3.3 mg/L and 2.7 µg/L, respectively, using ANN, whereas RMSEs were 12.7 mg/L and 12.9 µg/L for suspended particulate matter (SPM) and Chl-a concentrations, respectively, when C2RCC was applied on Landsat-8 data. Relative variable importance was also conducted to investigate the consistency between in situ reflectance data and satellite data, and results show that both datasets are similar. The red band (wavelength ≈ 0.665 µm) and the product of red and green band (wavelength ≈ 0.560 µm) were influential inputs in both reflectance data sets for estimating SS and turbidity, and the ratio between red and blue band (wavelength ≈ 0.490 µm) as well as the ratio between infrared (wavelength ≈ 0.865 µm) and blue band and green band proved to be more useful for the estimation of Chl-a concentration, due to their sensitivity to high turbidity in the coastal waters. The results indicate that the NN based machine learning approaches perform better and, thus, can be used for improved water quality monitoring with satellite data in optically complex coastal waters.
Highlights
The coastal marine ecosystem is both complex and vulnerable [1] as it is generally close to areas with high population density
For satellite images of Landsat 5 (L5), Landsat 7 (L7), and Landsat 8 (L8), uncalibrated digital numbers (DN) were converted to the Top of Atmosphere (TOA) spectral radiance, using radiometric rescaling coefficients provided in the image metadata file [23,36]
The Normalized Difference Water Index (NDWI) for open waters [39] was applied to all images for separating waterbodies from land or shadow casted by terrain, and to map the coastlines, based on a contrast threshold of NIR and visible green radiation
Summary
The coastal marine ecosystem is both complex and vulnerable [1] as it is generally close to areas with high population density. Increased anthropogenic activities along the coasts have resulted in the degradation of water quality [4], including runoff of agricultural fertilizers into rivers, resulting in high suspended solids with large nutrient inflows that can cause eutrophication. Eutrophication can further contribute to an increase in algal bloom events [5]. These blooms can block sunlight, resulting in an anoxic condition, in which dissolved oxygen is depleted within the coastal environment. Water quality indicators (WQIs), such as chlorophyll-a (Chl-a), suspended solids (SS), and turbidity, have been used as indicators for monitoring coastal and inland water quality [10,11,12,13]
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