4.6 Article

Inland Surface Waters Quantity Monitored from Remote Sensing

Journal

SURVEYS IN GEOPHYSICS
Volume 44, Issue 5, Pages 1519-1552

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10712-023-09803-x

Keywords

Radar altimetry; Satellite imagery; Rivers; Rating curve; Floodplain; Lakes

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Water availability, use, sharing and supply have become significant scientific and humanitarian concerns. Dealing with water scarcity and flooding requires better predictions and a combination of data from hydrological variables and models. Surface waters are the main source for water demand, but ground-based hydrological survey networks have decreased globally. Remote sensing techniques, such as satellite altimetry and imagery, are crucial for studying the water cycle on various scales and have been widely used for water resource monitoring.
In recent decades, water availability, water use, water sharing and freshwater supply for basic human and economic needs have become central scientific and humanitarian issues. With increasing water scarcity in many regions and increasing frequency of extreme flooding in other regions, there is a need to improve predictive capacity, to collect a large amount of information on key hydrological variables such as flows or water stocks in lakes and floodplains and to best combine these data with hydrological and hydrodynamic models. Most of the world's water demand relies on continental surface waters (rivers, lakes, wetlands and artificial reservoirs) while less on underground aquifers and seawater desalination. However, ground-based hydrological survey networks have steadily and drastically decreased worldwide over the last decades. In this context, current remote sensing techniques have been widely used by several countries for water resource monitoring purposes. In this paper, we present such remote sensing techniques, in particular satellite altimetry and imagery, and discuss how they became essential for the study of the water cycle and hydrological phenomena on a broad range of spatial and temporal scales. Large lakes, rivers and wetlands play a major role in the global water cycle and are also markers, integrators and actors of climate change at work on Earth. We show several examples chosen from the literature that perfectly highlight both current scientific and societal issues, as well as the crucial role of space techniques to monitor terrestrial surface waters.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available