 |
|
Using colorful satellite imagery, Dr. Luoheng Han is monitoring
water quality hundreds of miles away from his UA office.
|
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – A University of Alabama geographer is
monitoring the water quality of Florida’s Pensacola Bay without
even getting his feet wet. In fact, with some assistance from a
satellite orbiting some 438 miles above the Pensacola, Fla. area,
he can measure the water’s ever changing quality from his
office on the UA campus.
Dr. Luoheng Han, associate professor of geography at UA, is part
of a team researching environmental conditions in the Gulf of Mexico,
particularly those surrounding three Gulf Coast bays, Pensacola,
Galveston, and Apalachicola. Han is the team’s sole researcher
focusing on “remote sensing” of water quality, a technique
by which environmental conditions of an area are derived from satellite
imagery.
“Remote sensing is clearly the future of data collection,”
said Han.
A sensor aboard an orbiting satellite measures the brightness of
radiation reflected from specific items, such as chlorophyll, which
are in bodies of water. As the spectral signatures – the reflected
energy levels at specific wavelengths – of some of these items
are unique, the quality and quantity of these elements can be determined
by the remote sensed imagery.
Han logs onto a U.S. Geological Survey web site on the Internet
to access the satellite images. Various shades of blues, greens,
and browns appear on the map displayed upon Han’s computer
screen. “The images of the Pensacola Bay, for example, contain
seven different spectral bands,” Han said. “It’s
not like a conventional photograph.”
Using mathematical algorithms being developed by Han, numerical
values are assigned to the various shades. These values represent,
for examples, how much chlorophyll is in the water or the degree
of sediment present. An overabundance of chlorophyll may signal
severe oxygen depletion, known as hypoxia. Fish avoid these oxygen
depleted waters, and lobsters, shrimp and crabs sometimes die within
them, so its environmental and economic impacts are potentially
severe.
Han zooms in on a single pixel, the smallest element of the image
his computer monitor can process. This represents an area only about
42 yards square. “Each pixel carries water quality information,”
said Han.
For example, the sensor can detect an abundance of microscopic
algae, known as phytoplankton, by monitoring the concentration of
chlorophyll, a pigment present in the microscopic plants.
“When you have too much phytoplankton, too much algae, this
will deplete the oxygen,” Han said. This depletion occurs
as the plants fall to the ocean’s bottom and decompose, a
process that uses up available oxygen. Generally, excess nutrients
lead to increases in algae. Combined with enough light and warm,
slow-moving, and poorly mixed water, algae blooms can occur, Han
said. “This is the first step in the chain of reactions that
can lead to hypoxia.”
While Han uses digital imagery, provided by the Landsat 7 satellite,
scientists with the Gulf Ecology Division of the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency collect water samples in the standard manner,
aboard boats using water sampling bottles. With the assistance of
handheld global positioning system devices, known as GPS, the researchers
aboard the boats know their exact latitude and longitude positions.
Those samples are analyzed in the laboratory and then compared to
the pixels with the same latitude and longitude locations on the
satellite images. In this way, the linkage between the water quality
and pixel values on the image can be established.
“I will match, pixel by pixel, with the water sample given
to me.”
The 14-person team, known as the Consortium for Estuarine Ecoindicator
Research for the Gulf of Mexico, is headed by researchers at the
University of Southern Mississippi and includes university representatives
from six states. Han is the only scientist from UA.
Through the group’s data collection and computer modeling
– designed to predict potential changes in the areas –
the scientists hope to develop new indicators of hypoxia. This could
assist decision makers in identifying nutrient sources and alternatives
for reducing nutrient inputs, as well as examine the costs and benefits
associated with reducing the nutrient loads to coastal waters.
The project, slated to continue through November 2005, is funded
by a $5.9 million grant from the EPA. Han’s portion of the
funding is approximately $200,000.
Remote sensing is not without its drawbacks, Han said, particularly
in analyzing water quality. “Predicting water quality using
satellite imaging is a challenge because the water signal is not
very strong.” Wave effects, and shallow areas, particularly
near the extremely white sand beaches of Pensacola, can also distort
the readings. And cloudy days can create havoc in a researcher’s
day.
Still, the ability to monitor vast areas of water quickly saves
time and money. It’s effective now, and, as the technology
continues to advance, will grow more effective.
“Remote sensing technique is something the EPA thinks is
a very efficient tool to study water quality,” Han said.
|