期刊论文详细信息
Frontiers in Environmental Science
Mapping groundwater discharge seeps by thermal UAS imaging on a wetland restoration site
Environmental Science
C. Lyn Watts1  Christine E. Hatch1  Ryan Wicks2 
[1] Department of Earth, Geographic, and Climate Sciences, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA, United States;UMassAir, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA, United States;
关键词: thermal infrared (TIR);    wetlands;    groundwater–surface water interaction;    UAS (unmanned aircraft system);    UAV (unmanned aerial vehicle);    photogrammetry;    cranberries;    restoration;   
DOI  :  10.3389/fenvs.2022.946565
 received in 2022-05-17, accepted in 2022-12-05,  发布年份 2023
来源: Frontiers
PDF
【 摘 要 】

One of the key metrics for the effectiveness of wetland restoration is whether a restored wetland behaves hydrologically like a natural wetland. Restoration is designed to increase the water residence time on the surface of the site in order to capture and process nutrients, mitigate the impact of local flooding and drought, and provide a habitat for wetland species abundance and biodiversity. Quantifying the change in groundwater presence at the wetland’s surface will inform future freshwater wetland restorations across New England. The ability to produce a comprehensive map of the locations of groundwater discharge over a large area has the potential to provide insight into restoration practice, its success, and its effects on individual seeps over time. Identification, mapping, and measurement of groundwater discharge sites have long been a challenge, but new methodologies are developing with the advances in unmanned aerial systems (UAS). This study uses a UAS-mounted thermal infrared camera to map groundwater seeps on a 25-ha (62-acre) site in Plymouth, Massachusetts, before and after it underwent restoration to a freshwater wetland. Using the thermal map, we located and quantified the spatial extent that of groundwater seeps pre-restoration and the changes after restoration. The location and size of these seeps show that existing groundwater seeps remained immobile through restoration, but their surface expression grew, indicating that restoration removed barriers to surface expression and successfully increased residence time. This analysis using a thermal camera-enabled UAS allows for a temporal comparison over large spatial scales and provides insight into restoration impacts to groundwater expression on the surface of post-agricultural wetland sites.

【 授权许可】

Unknown   
Copyright © 2023 Watts, Hatch and Wicks.

【 预 览 】
附件列表
Files Size Format View
RO202310104406470ZK.pdf 5613KB PDF download
  文献评价指标  
  下载次数:1次 浏览次数:1次