THE SATELLITE DERIVATION OF DEPTH AND TOTAL SUSPENDED SOLIDS ASSESSMENT FOR ESTUARINE EROSION MONITORING WITHIN NARROW STRAIT USING SENTINEL-2A SATELLITE IMAGES

Estuaries are crucial marine areas for important hydrodynamics processes, such as sediment transport for supporting other marine ecosystems like mangrove forests. This study explores the relationship between total suspended solids (TSS) and water depth within a narrow strait area with Sentinel-2A sa...

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Published in:Journal of Sustainability Science and Management
Main Author: Syafiqah H.S.; Abd A.K.N.; Azman R.A.; Jamil T.; Akmal R.M.; Aizat K.S.; Amri M.F.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universiti Malaysia Terengganu 2023
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85185316930&doi=10.46754%2fjssm.2023.12.005&partnerID=40&md5=23923fbd54100b258844691391634fb0
id 2-s2.0-85185316930
spelling 2-s2.0-85185316930
Syafiqah H.S.; Abd A.K.N.; Azman R.A.; Jamil T.; Akmal R.M.; Aizat K.S.; Amri M.F.
THE SATELLITE DERIVATION OF DEPTH AND TOTAL SUSPENDED SOLIDS ASSESSMENT FOR ESTUARINE EROSION MONITORING WITHIN NARROW STRAIT USING SENTINEL-2A SATELLITE IMAGES
2023
Journal of Sustainability Science and Management
18
12
10.46754/jssm.2023.12.005
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85185316930&doi=10.46754%2fjssm.2023.12.005&partnerID=40&md5=23923fbd54100b258844691391634fb0
Estuaries are crucial marine areas for important hydrodynamics processes, such as sediment transport for supporting other marine ecosystems like mangrove forests. This study explores the relationship between total suspended solids (TSS) and water depth within a narrow strait area with Sentinel-2A satellite images. The gravimetric method and Normalize Suspended Material Index (NSMI) were used for TSS analysis and estimations. In contrast, the bathymetric survey and Stumpf ratio transform were used to validate and estimate the water depth from the satellite images. The estimation process begins with an assessment using 2018 in-situ data and further analysed for their differences between 2018 and 2020 using Sentinel-2A images comparison. This study found a relatively moderate estimation between water depth and satellite imagery at 53%, and the TSS estimation results show a stronger relationship of up to 80% as they were both analysed separately. The relationship between TSS and water depth shows a solid connection, which explains the correlation of 75–82% between them by the satellite images. The strong connection of estimation for depth and TSS within the narrow strait suggests continuous monitoring is reliable to support decisions for immediate action at estuarine areas. © UMT Press
Universiti Malaysia Terengganu
18238556
English
Article
All Open Access; Bronze Open Access
author Syafiqah H.S.; Abd A.K.N.; Azman R.A.; Jamil T.; Akmal R.M.; Aizat K.S.; Amri M.F.
spellingShingle Syafiqah H.S.; Abd A.K.N.; Azman R.A.; Jamil T.; Akmal R.M.; Aizat K.S.; Amri M.F.
THE SATELLITE DERIVATION OF DEPTH AND TOTAL SUSPENDED SOLIDS ASSESSMENT FOR ESTUARINE EROSION MONITORING WITHIN NARROW STRAIT USING SENTINEL-2A SATELLITE IMAGES
author_facet Syafiqah H.S.; Abd A.K.N.; Azman R.A.; Jamil T.; Akmal R.M.; Aizat K.S.; Amri M.F.
author_sort Syafiqah H.S.; Abd A.K.N.; Azman R.A.; Jamil T.; Akmal R.M.; Aizat K.S.; Amri M.F.
title THE SATELLITE DERIVATION OF DEPTH AND TOTAL SUSPENDED SOLIDS ASSESSMENT FOR ESTUARINE EROSION MONITORING WITHIN NARROW STRAIT USING SENTINEL-2A SATELLITE IMAGES
title_short THE SATELLITE DERIVATION OF DEPTH AND TOTAL SUSPENDED SOLIDS ASSESSMENT FOR ESTUARINE EROSION MONITORING WITHIN NARROW STRAIT USING SENTINEL-2A SATELLITE IMAGES
title_full THE SATELLITE DERIVATION OF DEPTH AND TOTAL SUSPENDED SOLIDS ASSESSMENT FOR ESTUARINE EROSION MONITORING WITHIN NARROW STRAIT USING SENTINEL-2A SATELLITE IMAGES
title_fullStr THE SATELLITE DERIVATION OF DEPTH AND TOTAL SUSPENDED SOLIDS ASSESSMENT FOR ESTUARINE EROSION MONITORING WITHIN NARROW STRAIT USING SENTINEL-2A SATELLITE IMAGES
title_full_unstemmed THE SATELLITE DERIVATION OF DEPTH AND TOTAL SUSPENDED SOLIDS ASSESSMENT FOR ESTUARINE EROSION MONITORING WITHIN NARROW STRAIT USING SENTINEL-2A SATELLITE IMAGES
title_sort THE SATELLITE DERIVATION OF DEPTH AND TOTAL SUSPENDED SOLIDS ASSESSMENT FOR ESTUARINE EROSION MONITORING WITHIN NARROW STRAIT USING SENTINEL-2A SATELLITE IMAGES
publishDate 2023
container_title Journal of Sustainability Science and Management
container_volume 18
container_issue 12
doi_str_mv 10.46754/jssm.2023.12.005
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85185316930&doi=10.46754%2fjssm.2023.12.005&partnerID=40&md5=23923fbd54100b258844691391634fb0
description Estuaries are crucial marine areas for important hydrodynamics processes, such as sediment transport for supporting other marine ecosystems like mangrove forests. This study explores the relationship between total suspended solids (TSS) and water depth within a narrow strait area with Sentinel-2A satellite images. The gravimetric method and Normalize Suspended Material Index (NSMI) were used for TSS analysis and estimations. In contrast, the bathymetric survey and Stumpf ratio transform were used to validate and estimate the water depth from the satellite images. The estimation process begins with an assessment using 2018 in-situ data and further analysed for their differences between 2018 and 2020 using Sentinel-2A images comparison. This study found a relatively moderate estimation between water depth and satellite imagery at 53%, and the TSS estimation results show a stronger relationship of up to 80% as they were both analysed separately. The relationship between TSS and water depth shows a solid connection, which explains the correlation of 75–82% between them by the satellite images. The strong connection of estimation for depth and TSS within the narrow strait suggests continuous monitoring is reliable to support decisions for immediate action at estuarine areas. © UMT Press
publisher Universiti Malaysia Terengganu
issn 18238556
language English
format Article
accesstype All Open Access; Bronze Open Access
record_format scopus
collection Scopus
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