A unified model for high resolution mapping of global lake (>1 ha) clarity using Landsat imagery data.

2021 
Abstract Lake clarity, usually measured by Secchi disc depth (SDD), is a reliable proxy of lakes trophic status due to its close link with total suspended matter, chlorophyll-a, and nutrients. Trained with in-situ measured SDD and match-up Landsat images, we established various regression models to estimate SDD for global lakes. We selected a unified model which demonstrated good spatiotemporal transferability, and has potential to map SDD in different years with good quality of Landsat top-of-atmosphere (TOA) images embedded in Google Earth Engine (GEE). The unified model was successfully calibrated (n = 3586 data points, R2 = 0.84, MAPE = 29.8%) against SDD measured in 2235 lakes across the world, and the validation (n = 1779, R2 = 0.76, MAPE = 38.8%) also exhibited stable performance. The unified model was tuned to historical SDD measurements coincident with different Landsat sensors (L5-TM, L7-ETM+, L8-OLI) launched over the past four decades (1984–2020), thus confirming its temporal stability. Global SDD was mapped using GEE with OLI TOA products mainly acquired in 2019 to examine the spatial variation of lake water clarity (lake surface area ≥ 1 ha) all over the world. Worldwide, lake water clarity averaged 3.13 ± 1.71 m in 2019, but exhibited remarkable spatial variability due to catchment hydrological and landscape settings, lake morphology, elevation and anthropogenic impact. Inland waters in Europe (4.18 ± 1.82 m) and North America (3.84 ± 1.77 m) had the highest clarity due to greater water depth combined with less human disturbance in the high latitude regions. Lakes in South America (2.50 ± 2.33 m), Asia (2.44 ± 1.63 m) and Africa (2.36 ± 0.72 m) displayed intermediate clarity. Lakes in Oceania (1.97 ± 1.48 m) exhibited the lowest clarity for all continents except Antarctica. Further, we used the mapped SDD to evaluate water trophic status using the Carlson trophic state index. Our results indicate that, in 2019, about 63.6% of the lake areas and 47.8% of total lake numbers (2,219,627/4,646,056) were oligotrophic for global lakes, while about 23.6% areal percent and 37.1% of lake numbers are eutrophic mostly as a result of their being located in agricultural and urban-dominated drainage basins. This study, for the first time, provides water clarity information for lakes with area ≥ 1 ha all over the world with 30-m resolution and facilitates the understanding of the water clarity relevant to TSM (r = 0.95), Chl-a (r = 0.73), total phosphorus (r = 0.75), total nitrogen (r = 0.60), which could further provide water clarity data and technical support for trophic level evaluations as well. This unified model could serve as a powerful research tool for long-term monitoring of aquatic ecosystems and assessing their resilience to anthropogenic disturbance and climate change-related stressors.
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