Publications

Dogliotti, AI; Gossn, JI; Vanhellemont, Q; Ruddick, KG (2018). Detecting and Quantifying a Massive Invasion of Floating Aquatic Plants in the Rio de la Plata Turbid Waters Using High Spatial Resolution Ocean Color Imagery. REMOTE SENSING, 10(7), 1140.

Abstract
The massive development of floating plants in floodplain lakes and wetlands in the upper Middle Parana river in the La Plata basin is environmentally and socioeconomically important. Every year aquatic plant detachments drift downstream arriving in small amounts to the Rio de la Plata, but huge temporary invasions have been observed every 10 or 15 years associated to massive floods. From late December 2015, heavy rains driven by a strong El Nino increased river levels, provoking a large temporary invasion of aquatic plants from January to May 2016. This event caused significant disruption of human activities via clogging of drinking water intakes in the estuary, blocking of ports and marinas and introducing dangerous animals from faraway wetlands into the city. In this study, we developed a scheme to map floating vegetation in turbid waters using high-resolution imagery, like Sentinel-2/SMI (MultiSpectral Imager), Landsat-8/OLI (Operational Land Imager), and Aqua/MODIS (MODerate resolution Imager Spectroradiometer)-250 m. A combination of the Floating Algal Index (that make use of the strong signal in the NIR part of the spectrum), plus conditions set on the RED band (to avoid misclassifying highly turbid waters) and on the CIE La*b* color space coordinates (to confirm the visually "green" pixels as floating vegetation) were used. A time-series of multisensor high resolution imagery was analyzed to study the temporal variability, covered area and distribution of the unusual floating macroalgae invasion that started in January 2016 in the Rio de la Plata estuary.

DOI:
10.3390/rs10071140

ISSN:
2072-4292