Abstract

The macroalgal bloom (MAB) is caused by brown algae forming a floating mat. Most of its parts stay below the water surface, unlike green algae; thus, its backscatter value becomes weaker in the synthetic aperture radar (SAR) images, such as Sentinel−1, due to the dampening effect. Thus, brown algae patches appear to be thin strands in contrast to green algae and their detection by using a global threshold, which is challenging due to a similarity between the MAB patch and the ship’s sidelobe in the case of pixel value. Therefore, a novel approach is proposed to detect the MAB from the Sentinel−1 image by eliminating the ship’s sidelobe. An individually optimized threshold is applied to extract the MAB and the ships with sidelobes from the image. Then, parameters are adjusted based on the object’s area information and the ratio of length and width to filter out ships with sidelobes and clutter objects. With this method, an average detection accuracy of 82.2% is achieved by comparing it with the reference data. The proposed approach is simple and effective for detecting the thin MAB patch from the SAR image.

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