JOURNAL ARTICLE

Study of Hydrologic Connectivity and Tidal Influence on Water Flow Within Louisiana Coastal Wetlands Using Rapid-Repeat Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar

B. K. VaruguCathleen E. JonesTalib Oliver‐CabreraMarc SimardDaniel Jensen

Year: 2025 Journal:   Remote Sensing Vol: 17 (3)Pages: 459-459   Publisher: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute

Abstract

The exchange of water, sediment, and nutrients in wetlands occurs through a complex network of channels and overbank flow. Although optical sensors can map channels at high resolution, they fail to identify narrow intermittent channels colonized by vegetation. Here we demonstrate an innovative application of rapid-repeat interferometric synthetic aperture radar (InSAR) to study hydrologic connectivity and tidal influences in Louisiana’s coastal wetlands, which can provide valuable insights into water flow dynamics, particularly in vegetation-covered and narrow channels where traditional optical methods struggle. Data used were from the airborne UAVSAR L-band sensor acquired for the Delta-X mission. We applied interferometric techniques to rapid-repeat (~30 min) SAR imagery of the southern Atchafalaya basin acquired during two flights encompassing rising-to-high tides and ebbing-to-low tides. InSAR coherence is used to identify and differentiate permanent open water channels from intermittent channels in which flow occurs underneath the vegetation canopy. The channel networks at rising and ebbing tides show significant differences in the extent of flow, with vegetation-filled small channels more clearly identified at rising-to-high tide. The InSAR phase change is used to identify locations on channel banks where overbank flow occurs, which is a critical component for modeling wetland hydrodynamics. This is the first study to use rapid-repeat InSAR to monitor tidal impacts on water flow dynamics in wetlands. The results show that the InSAR method outperforms traditional optical remote sensing methods in monitoring water flow in vegetation-covered wetlands, providing high-resolution data to support hydrodynamic models and critical support for wetland protection and management.

Keywords:
Remote sensing Wetland Geology Environmental science Synthetic aperture radar Radar

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5
Cited By
10.21
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
104
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0.94
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Citation History

Topics

Soil Moisture and Remote Sensing
Physical Sciences →  Environmental Science →  Environmental Engineering
Precipitation Measurement and Analysis
Physical Sciences →  Earth and Planetary Sciences →  Atmospheric Science
Coastal and Marine Dynamics
Physical Sciences →  Earth and Planetary Sciences →  Earth-Surface Processes

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