Abstract

Transport of suspended particulate matter (SPM) in estuarine waters plays an important role in regulating erosion-accretion and biogeochemical processes. In the Yellow River Estuary (YRE), artificial water and sediment regulation scheme (WSRS) and coastal engineering structures are the 2 typical anthropogenic activities affecting the spatiotemporal dynamics of estuarine SPM. The monitoring of SPM transport affected by such human activities requires SPM mapping at both high spatial and high temporal resolutions. In this study, we presented an improved Flexible Spatiotemporal Data Fusion (FSDAF) strategy with consideration of highly dynamic SPM variations in estuarine waters, and generated 30-m hourly SPM concentrations based on Landsat 8 OLI and GOCI datasets. The new strategy produced higher SPM estimation accuracy than the original FSDAF, with the relative percentage difference (RPD) decreasing from 29.75% to 5.31% using GOCI-derived hourly SPM as reference. With in situ SPM measurements as reference, the fused SPM concentrations had an RMSE of 12.09 mg/L and an RPD of 27.17%. Investigation of interday SPM variations before, during, and after the WSRS in 2018 revealed that the first WSRS significantly increased the SPM concentration and plume extent; new wetland with an area of 12.56 km2 was formed due to sediment accretion near the river mouth. The two groins offshore from the coastlines on the north and south sides of YRE exhibited obvious sediment trapping effects in that higher SPM concentrations on one side of each groin were found regardless of the turbidity modes and diurnal SPM variations; the trapping effects were associated with the number of groins and groin length. Intraday variations of SPM were influenced by tidal currents, with plume direction following the ebb and flooding tidal current direction. The inter- and intraday characteristics of the 30-m hourly SPM dynamics facilitate the detailed analysis of the sediment transport associated with human activities.

Full Text
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