Surface water monitoring in small water bodies: potential and limits of multi-sensor Landsat time series - BRGM - Bureau de recherches géologiques et minières Accéder directement au contenu
Article Dans Une Revue Hydrology and Earth System Sciences Année : 2018

Surface water monitoring in small water bodies: potential and limits of multi-sensor Landsat time series

Gilles Belaud
  • Fonction : Auteur
Sylvain Massuel
Mark Mulligan
  • Fonction : Auteur
Patrick Le Goulven
  • Fonction : Auteur
Roger Calvez
  • Fonction : Auteur

Résumé

Hydrometric monitoring of small water bodies (1–10 ha) remains rare, due to their limited size and large numbers, preventing accurate assessments of their agricultural potential or their cumulative influence in watershed hydrology. Landsat imagery has shown its potential to support mapping of small water bodies, but the influence of their limited surface areas, vegetation growth, and rapid flood dynamics on long-term surface water monitoring remains unquantified. A semi-automated method is developed here to assess and optimize the potential of multi-sensor Landsat time series to monitor surface water extent and mean water availability in these small water bodies. Extensive hydrometric field data (1999–2014) for seven small reservoirs within the Merguellil catchment in central Tunisia and SPOT imagery are used to calibrate the method and explore its limits. The Modified Normalised Difference Water Index (MNDWI) is shown out of six commonly used water detection indices to provide high overall accuracy and threshold stability during high and low floods, leading to a mean surface area error below 15 %. Applied to 546 Landsat 5, 7, and 8 images over 1999–2014, the method reproduces surface water extent variations across small lakes with high skill (R2=0.9) and a mean root mean square error (RMSE) of 9300 m2. Comparison with published global water datasets reveals a mean RMSE of 21 800 m2 (+134 %) on the same lakes and highlights the value of a tailored MNDWI approach to improve hydrological monitoring in small lakes and reduce omission errors of flooded vegetation. The rise in relative errors due to the larger proportion and influence of mixed pixels restricts surface water monitoring below 3 ha with Landsat (Normalised RMSE = 27 %). Interferences from clouds and scan line corrector failure on ETM+ after 2003 also decrease the number of operational images by 51 %, reducing performance on lakes with rapid flood declines. Combining Landsat observations with 10 m pansharpened Sentinel-2 imagery further reduces RMSE to 5200 m2, displaying the increased opportunities for surface water monitoring in small water bodies after 2015.

Domaines

Hydrologie
Fichier principal
Vignette du fichier
hess-22-4349-2018.pdf (30.17 Mo) Télécharger le fichier
Origine : Fichiers éditeurs autorisés sur une archive ouverte
Licence : CC BY - Paternité

Dates et versions

hal-04521266 , version 1 (26-03-2024)

Identifiants

Citer

Andrew Ogilvie, Gilles Belaud, Sylvain Massuel, Mark Mulligan, Patrick Le Goulven, et al.. Surface water monitoring in small water bodies: potential and limits of multi-sensor Landsat time series. Hydrology and Earth System Sciences, 2018, 22 (8), pp.4349 - 4380. ⟨10.5194/hess-22-4349-2018⟩. ⟨hal-04521266⟩
3 Consultations
0 Téléchargements

Altmetric

Partager

Gmail Facebook X LinkedIn More