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  Journal > Table of Contents > Volume 5 Issue 2 > Abstract
 

Assessing freshwater inflows to the hypersaline lower Laguna Madre Estuary of Texas using spectral radiometry, aerial videography, and in situ physicochemistry

Charles F Webster1, Randall L. Repic2, David Escobar*3, James Everitt3, M. R. Davis3

1The University of Texas-Pan American Coastal Studies Lab, 100 Marine Lab Drive, South Padre Island, TX 78597;
2Department of Earth and Resource Science, The University of Michigan-Flint, Flint, MI, 48502; 3USDA/ARS/ Integrated Fanning and Natural Resources Research Unit, 2413 East Hwy. 83, Weslaco, TX 78596 Corresponding author: Tel: 956-969-4824; Fax: 956-969-4893;
E-mail: descobar@weslaco.ars.usda.gov

Abstract

  The Lower Laguna Madre is a biologically productive, subtropical, hypersaline estuary on the southern Texas Coast Its shallow waters tend to be relatively clear over extensive seagrass beds that serve as important areas for many Gulf of Mexico species and as food for the largest wintering population of redhead ducks (Aytha americana) in North America. The Arroyo Colorado and its distributary arm, the North Floodway are the only two freshwater streams entering the Lower Laguna Madre. Both streams are turbid and deliver particulate, nutrient, and chlorophyll/pheophytin loads to the estuary. Water reflectance, airborne and in situ physicochemical data were acquired from two above-tidal and two tidal stations in Arroyo Colorado and from one station in the estuary at the confluence of the Arroyo Colorado with the Gulf lntracoastal Waterway during the summer of 1995. Analysis of the spectral data, collected imagery and physicochemistry confirm that near-surface chlorophyllous aggregates (chlorophyll a and pheophytin) can be imaged, yielding both qualitative and quantitative results. Correlation coefficients greater than U 90 were obtained when digital data from specified spectral bands and band ratios were compared to chlorophyll a, total dissolved solids and total dissolved solids concentrations. Results demonstrate the potential of rapid airborne image acquisition for detecting and mapping effluent discharges into rivers and estuaries. Video remote sensing could be used for environmental monitoring by government agencies, managers, planners, and others making decisions about land and water use, disposition, and development.

Keywords: remote sensing, chlorophyll a, pheophytin

Aquatic Ecosystem Health and Management: 5(2); 163-172
 

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