4.7 Article

Characterization of terrestrial water dynamics in the Congo Basin using GRACE and satellite radar altimetry

Journal

REMOTE SENSING OF ENVIRONMENT
Volume 115, Issue 12, Pages 3530-3538

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.rse.2011.08.015

Keywords

Congo; Wetland; Water storage; GRACE; Satellite Radar Altimetry

Funding

  1. NASA
  2. Ohio State University

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The Congo Basin is the world's third largest in size (similar to 3.7 million km(2)), and second only to the Amazon River in discharge (similar to 40,200 m(3) s(-1) annual average). However, the hydrological dynamics of seasonally flooded wetlands and floodplains remains poorly quantified. Here, we separate the Congo wetland into four 3 degrees x 3 degrees regions, and use remote sensing measurements (i.e., GRACE, satellite radar altimeter, GPCP, JERS-1, SRTM, and MODIS) to estimate the amounts of water filling and draining from the Congo wetland, and to determine the source of the water. We find that the amount of water annually filling and draining the Congo wetlands is 111 km(3), which is about one-third the size of the water volumes found on the mainstem Amazon floodplain. Based on amplitude comparisons among the water volume changes and timing comparisons among their fluxes, we conclude that the local upland runoff is the main source of the Congo wetland water, not the fluvial process of river-floodplain water exchange as in the Amazon. Our hydraulic analysis using altimeter measurements also supports our conclusion by demonstrating that water surface elevations in the wetlands are consistently higher than the adjacent river water levels. Our research highlights differences in the hydrology and hydrodynamics between the Congo wetland and the mainstem Amazon floodplain. (C) 2011 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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