Abstract
The seagrass Thalassia testudinum is the dominant habitat-builder in coastal reef lagoons of the Caribbean, and provides vital ecosystem services including coastal protection and carbon storage. We used a remote sensing methodology to map T. testudinum canopies over 400 km of coastline of the eastern Yucatán Peninsula, comparing the depth distribution of canopy density, in terms of leaf area index (LAI), to a previously established ecological model of depth and LAI for this species in oligotrophic conditions. The full archive of Sentinel-2 imagery from 2016 to 2020 was applied in an automated model inversion method to simultaneously estimate depth and LAI, covering ∼900 km2 of lagoon with approximately 800 images. Data redundancy allowed for statistical tests of change detection. Achieved accuracy was sufficient for the objectives: LAI estimates compared to field data had mean absolute error of 0.59, systematic error of 0.04 and r2 > 0.67 over a range of 0–5. Bathymetry compared to 46,000 ICESat-2 data points had a mean absolute error of 1 m, systematic error less than 0.5 m, and r2 > 0.88 over a range of 0–15 m. The estimated total area of seagrass canopy was consistent with previously published estimates of ∼580 km2, but dense canopies (LAI > 3), which are the primary contributors to below-ground carbon storage, comprise only ∼40 km2. Within the year-to-year variation there was no change in overall seagrass abundance 2017–2020, but localised statistically significant (p < 0.01) patches of canopy extension and retraction occurred. 2018 and 2019 were affected by beaching of pelagic Sargassum and dispersion as organic matter into the lagoon. The multi-year analysis enabled excluding this influence and provided an estimate of its extent along the coast. Finally, the distribution of LAI with depth was consistent with the ecological model and showed a gradient from north to south which mirrored a well-established gradient in anthropogenic pressure due to touristic development. Denser canopies were more abundant in developed areas, the expected growth response to nutrient enrichment. This increase in canopy density may be a useful early bio-indicator of environmental eutrophication, detectable by remote sensing before habitat deterioration is observed.
Highlights
Seagrass beds worldwide are of significant environmental and economic importance (Costanza et al, 1997)
The output maps of leaf area index (LAI) and depth agree with visual interpretation of the images (Figure 4)
The current analysis indicates that the areas with the least incursion of pelagic Sargassum were the far north, far south, and the ESN site which is a south-west facing section of coastline at the edge of the large “Bahía del Espíritu Santo” bay
Summary
Seagrass beds worldwide are of significant environmental and economic importance (Costanza et al, 1997). These highly productive coastal ecosystems (Duarte and Chiscano, 1999) provide numerous services including coastal protection, fisheries support, trapping and stabilization of sediments, nutrient biogeochemical cycling, and carbon storage (Fonesca and Cahalan, 1992; Gacia et al, 1999; Agawin and Duarte, 2002; Duarte et al, 2005; Gillanders, 2006; Romero et al, 2006; Kennedy et al, 2010; Fourqurean et al, 2012; Enríquez et al, 2019). Studies have yet to conclusively demonstrate this link (van Tussenbroek et al, 2014; Cortés et al, 2019)
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have
Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.