Searching for hyperspectral optical proxies to aid Chesapeake Bay resource managers in the detection of poor water quality

Stephanie Schollaert Uz1, Rossana Del Vecchio2, John McKay3, Jennifer Wolny4, Carmen Cartisano5 and Shannon McDonnell5, (1)NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Earth Sciences Division, Greenbelt, United States, (2)University of Maryland, ESSIC, College Park, MD, United States, (3)Maryland Department of Environment, Shellfish Monitoring Division, Annapolis, MD, United States, (4)Department of Natural Resources, Annapolis, MD, United States, (5)University of Maryland, Chemistry, College Park, United States
Abstract:
Shellfish aquaculture is a growing industry in the Chesapeake Bay. As population grows near the coast, extreme weather events cause a greater volume of pollutant runoff from impervious surfaces and agricultural lands. Resource managers who monitor shellfish beds need reliable information on a variety of water quality indicators at higher frequency than is possible through field monitoring programs and at a higher level of detail than current satellite products can provide. Although many factors causing degraded water quality that can impact human health are not currently discernable by traditional multispectral techniques, hyperspectral imagery offers a new opportunity to detect phytoplankton communities associated with harmful algal blooms and biotoxin production. Together with resource managers in their routine monitoring of sites around the bay from small boats, we have been exploring remotely sensed optical proxies for the detection of harmful algal blooms and sewage. Early warning by remote sensing could guide sampling and improve the efficiency of shellfish bed closures, ultimately improving health outcomes for humans and animals. An extensive network of routine sampling by Chesapeake Bay Program managers makes this is an ideal location to develop and test future satellite data products to support management decisions. Next generation hyperspectral measurements from the future Plankton Aerosol Cloud ocean Ecosystem (PACE) mission at nearly daily frequency, combined with the potential of higher spatial resolution from the Surface Biology and Geology (SBG) observing system recommended in the recent Decadal Survey, along with high frequency observations from the newly selected Geostationary Littoral Imaging and Monitoring Radiometer (GLIMR) Earth Venture Instrument make this a critical time for defining the needs of the aquaculture and resource management community to save lives, time, and money.