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Spatio-temporal analysis of prodelta dynamics by means of new satellite generation: the case of Po river by Landsat-8 data
Author(s) -
Ciro Manzo,
Federica Braga,
Luca Zaggia,
Vittorio Brando,
Claudia Giardino,
Mariano Bresciani,
Cristiana Bassani
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
international journal of applied earth observation and geoinformation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.623
H-Index - 98
eISSN - 1872-826X
pISSN - 1569-8432
DOI - 10.1016/j.jag.2017.11.012
Subject(s) - variogram , turbidity , spatial variability , environmental science , wind speed , geostatistics , geology , remote sensing , hydrology (agriculture) , kriging , oceanography , statistics , mathematics , geotechnical engineering
This paper describes a procedure to perform spatio-temporal analysis of river plume dispersion in prodelta areas by multi-temporal Landsat-8-derived products for identifying zones sensitive to water discharge and for providing geostatistical patterns of turbidity linked to different meteo-marine forcings. In particular, we characterized the temporal and spatial variability of turbidity and sea surface temperature (SST) in the Po River prodelta (Northern Adriatic Sea, Italy) during the period 2013–2016. To perform this analysis, a two-pronged processing methodology was implemented and the resulting outputs were analysed through a series of statistical tools. A pixel-based spatial correlation analysis was carried out by comparing temporal curves of turbidity and SST hypercubes with in situ time series of wind speed and water discharge, providing correlation coefficient maps. A geostatistical analysis was performed to determine the spatial dependency of the turbidity datasets per each satellite image, providing maps of correlation and variograms. The results show a linear correlation between water discharge and turbidity variations in the points more affected by the buoyant plumes and along the southern coast of Po River delta. Better inverse correlation was found between turbidity and SST during floods rather than other periods. The correlation maps of wind speed with turbidity show different spatial patterns depending on local or basin-scale wind effects. Variogram maps identify different spatial anisotropy structures of turbidity in response to ambient conditions (i.e. strong Bora or Scirocco winds, floods). Since the implemented processing methodology is based on open source software and free satellite data, it represents a promising tool for the monitoring of maritime ecosystems and to address water quality analyses and the investigations of sediment dynamics in estuarine and coastal waters.

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