Abstract

The U.S. Geological Survey is developing new Landsat science products. One, named Dynamic Surface Water Extent (DSWE), is focused on the representation of ground surface inundation as detected in cloud-/shadow-/snow-free pixels for scenes collected over the U.S. and its territories. Characterization of DSWE uncertainty to facilitate its appropriate use in science and resource management is a primary objective. A unique evaluation dataset developed from data made publicly available through the Everglades Depth Estimation Network (EDEN) was used to evaluate one candidate DSWE algorithm that is relatively simple, requires no scene-based calibration data, and is intended to detect inundation in the presence of marshland vegetation. A conceptual model of expected algorithm performance in vegetated wetland environments was postulated, tested and revised. Agreement scores were calculated at the level of scenes and vegetation communities, vegetation index classes, water depths, and individual EDEN gage sites for a variety of temporal aggregations. Landsat Archive cloud cover attribution errors were documented. Cloud cover had some effect on model performance. Error rates increased with vegetation cover. Relatively low error rates for locations of little/no vegetation were unexpectedly dominated by omission errors due to variable substrates and mixed pixel effects. Examined discrepancies between satellite and in situ modeled inundation demonstrated the utility of such comparisons for EDEN database improvement. Importantly, there seems no trend or bias in candidate algorithm performance as a function of time or general hydrologic conditions, an important finding for long-term monitoring. The developed database and knowledge gained from this analysis will be used for improved evaluation of candidate DSWE algorithms as well as other measurements made on Everglades surface inundation, surface water heights and vegetation using radar, lidar and hyperspectral instruments. Although no other sites have such an extensive in situ network or long-term records, the broader applicability of this and other candidate DSWE algorithms is being evaluated in other wetlands using this work as a guide. Continued interaction among DSWE producers and potential users will help determine whether the measured accuracies are adequate for practical utility in resource management.

Highlights

  • Wetlands are important for the ecosystem services they provide, including flood mitigation, water purification, wildlife habitat and recreational potential [1,2]

  • The developed database and knowledge gained from this analysis will be used for improved evaluation of candidate Dynamic Surface Water Extent (DSWE) algorithms as well as other measurements made on Everglades surface inundation, surface water heights and vegetation using radar, lidar and hyperspectral instruments

  • Based on a region-wide geospatial framework [6], the Everglades Depth Estimation Network (EDEN) is a compilation of an extensive gage network managed by numerous agencies, surface water heights modeled from those gages [7] and digital elevation models (DEMs) derived from thousands of sub-water surface ground height measurements [8]

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Summary

Introduction

Wetlands are important for the ecosystem services they provide, including flood mitigation, water purification, wildlife habitat and recreational potential [1,2]. Based on a region-wide geospatial framework [6], the EDEN is a compilation of an extensive gage network managed by numerous agencies, surface water heights modeled from those gages [7] and digital elevation models (DEMs) derived from thousands of sub-water surface ground height measurements [8]. This may be the most extensive wetland gage network in the world and is certainly a unique dataset for a variety of hydrologic, biologic and remote sensing experiments. Research on the scale lengths over which Everglades vegetation varies [10,11]

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