Abstract

More well-maintained green spaces leading toward sustainable, smart green cities mean that alternative water resources (e.g., wastewater) are needed to fulfill the water demand of urban greenery. These alternative resources may introduce some environmental hazards, such as salt leaching through wastewater irrigation. Despite the necessity of salinity monitoring and management in urban green spaces, most attention has been on agricultural fields. This study was defined to investigate the capability and feasibility of monitoring and predicting soil salinity using proximal sensing and remote sensing approaches. The innovation of the study lies in the fact that it is one of the first research studies to investigate soil salinity in heterogeneous urban vegetation with two approaches: proximal sensing salinity mapping using Electromagnetic-induction Meter (EM38) surveys and remote sensing using the high-resolution multispectral image of WorldView3. The possible spectral band combinations that form spectral indices were calculated using remote sensing techniques. The results from the EM38 survey were validated by testing soil samples in the laboratory. These findings were compared to remote sensing-based soil salinity indicators to examine their competence on mapping and predicting spatial variation of soil salinity in urban greenery. Several regression models were fitted; the mixed effect modeling was selected as the most appropriate to analyze data, as it takes into account the systematic observation-specific unobserved heterogeneity. Our results showed that Soil Adjusted Vegetation Index (SAVI) was the only salinity index that could be considered for predicting soil salinity in urban greenery using high-resolution images, yet further investigation is recommended.

Highlights

  • Most urban green spaces in arid and semi-arid climates such as South Australia, which are experiencing hotter and drier summers with more frequent and severe droughts, are facing critical challenges in maintaining and expanding their urban green spaces

  • Because the histogram is slightly skewed to the right, the mean value is slightly greater than the median

  • This study investigated the capability and feasibility of predicting the soil salinity status for urban greenery in a semi-arid climate using the two approaches of proximal sensing and remote sensing

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Summary

Introduction

Most urban green spaces in arid and semi-arid climates such as South Australia, which are experiencing hotter and drier summers with more frequent and severe droughts, are facing critical challenges in maintaining and expanding their urban green spaces. In the city of Adelaide, South Australia, recycled wastewater from the Glenelg to the Adelaide Parklands (GAP) scheme is the primary irrigation source for the largest public urban greenery, the Adelaide Parklands. This is an area covering approximately 720 hectares that contains a variety of soils, vegetation, and microclimates. Destructive soil sampling or leachate collection would not be a practical approach to study the salinity status in such a vast area Quite these types of field work at these large scales are expensive, regarding labor, and the costs involve the leachate water quality analysis. Considering the capability, availability, and affordability of proximal sensing (near sensing) and remote sensing approaches, this research was designed to find a simple, practical, and affordable way to investigate the capability of these methods to map and model soil salinity of urban greenery

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