4.7 Article

Detecting Coastal Wetland Degradation by Combining Remote Sensing and Hydrologic Modeling

期刊

FORESTS
卷 13, 期 3, 页码 -

出版社

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/f13030411

关键词

coastal wetland degradation; remote sensing; NDVI; climate change; sea-level rise; saltwater intrusion; hydrologic model; Alligator River National Wildlife Refuge; USA

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资金

  1. Duke Graduate Student Training Enhancement Grants
  2. Duke Nicholas School Dean's Research Fund
  3. United States Department of Agriculture's Forest Service (USDA-FS)

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Sea-level rise and climate change pose increasing threats to coastal wetlands. This study developed a new framework using remote sensing data and a hydrologic model to detect and understand the spatial and temporal patterns of coastal wetland degradation. By studying a wildlife refuge in North Carolina, it was found that most of the detected degradation occurred within 2 km from the shoreline and in the past five years.
Sea-level rise and climate change stresses pose increasing threats to coastal wetlands that are vital to wildlife habitats, carbon sequestration, water supply, and other ecosystem services with global significance. However, existing studies are limited in individual sites, and large-scale mapping of coastal wetland degradation patterns over a long period is rare. Our study developed a new framework to detect spatial and temporal patterns of coastal wetland degradation by analyzing fine-scale, long-term remotely sensed Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) data. Then, this framework was tested to track the degradation of coastal wetlands at the Alligator River National Wildlife Refuge (ARNWR) in North Carolina, United States, during the period from 1995 to 2019. We identified six types of coastal wetland degradation in the study area. Most of the detected degradation was located within 2 km from the shoreline and occurred in the past five years. Further, we used a state-of-the-art coastal hydrologic model, PIHM-Wetland, to investigate key hydrologic processes/variables that control the coastal wetland degradation. The temporal and spatial distributions of simulated coastal flooding and saltwater intrusion confirmed the location and timing of wetland degradation detected by remote sensing. The combined method also quantified the possible critical thresholds of water tables for wetland degradation. The remote sensing-hydrologic model integrated scheme proposed in this study provides a new tool for detecting and understanding coastal wetland degradation mechanisms. Our study approach can also be extended to other coastal wetland regions to understand how climate change and sea-level rise impact wetland transformations.

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