4.7 Article

Retrieval of Simultaneous Water-Level Changes in Small Lakes With InSAR

Journal

GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS
Volume 49, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2021GL095950

Keywords

SAR interferometry; DInSAR time series; sentinel-1; water levels

Funding

  1. Colombian Ministry of Science, Technology and Innovation (MINCIENCIAS) [647]
  2. Swedish National Space Agency [180/18]

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This study develops a novel approach using DInSAR to detect water level changes in small lakes, based on subsequential pixel-wise observations of the Sentinel-1B sensor. The study findings show that the DInSAR-derived water level changes are consistent with precipitation and capture the peak of the wet seasons. Furthermore, the accumulated water level changes can be explained by differences in lake area.
Monitoring water level changes is necessary to manage, conserve and restore natural, and anthropogenic lake systems. However, the in-situ monitoring of lake systems is unfeasible due to limitations of costs and access. Furthermore, current remote sensing methods are restricted to large lakes and low spatial resolutions. We develop a novel approach using subsequential pixel-wise observations of the Sentinel-1B sensor based on interferometric synthetic aperture radar to detect water level changes in small lakes. We used 24 small ungauged lakes of the Cajas Massif lake system in Ecuador for development and validation. We found Differential Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (DInSAR)-derived water level changes across lakes to be consistent with precipitation, capturing the peak of the wet seasons. Furthermore, accumulated water level changes could be explained by differences in lake area among lakes. Although with limitations, this study shows the underutilized potential of DInSAR to understand water level changes in small lakes with current radar data availability.

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