4.7 Article

Satellite Image Processing for the Coarse-Scale Investigation of Sandy Coastal Areas

Journal

REMOTE SENSING
Volume 13, Issue 22, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/rs13224613

Keywords

Google Earth Engine; satellite images; shoreline detection; geomorphology; coastal vegetation; beach monitoring

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Satellite imagery plays a crucial role in supporting sustainable management of land, water, and natural resources; Utilizing online platforms like Google Earth Engine enables users to efficiently process large satellite datasets; Validation of algorithms can accurately classify coastal land cover, providing essential information for studying ecological dynamics.
In recent years, satellite imagery has shown its potential to support the sustainable management of land, water, and natural resources. In particular, it can provide key information about the properties and behavior of sandy beaches and the surrounding vegetation, improving the ecomorphological understanding and modeling of coastal dynamics. Although satellite image processing usually demands high memory and computational resources, free online platforms such as Google Earth Engine (GEE) have recently enabled their users to leverage cloud-based tools and handle big satellite data. In this technical note, we describe an algorithm to classify the coastal land cover and retrieve relevant information from Sentinel-2 and Landsat image collections at specific times or in a multitemporal way: the extent of the beach and vegetation strips, the statistics of the grass cover, and the position of the shoreline and the vegetation-sand interface. Furthermore, we validate the algorithm through both quantitative and qualitative methods, demonstrating the goodness of the derived classification (accuracy of approximately 90%) and showing some examples about the use of the algorithm's output to study coastal physical and ecological dynamics. Finally, we discuss the algorithm's limitations and potentialities in light of its scaling for global analyses.

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