Title :
Combined GIS and ROV technologies improve characterization of water quality in coastal rivers of the Gulf of Mexico
Author :
Casper, A.F. ; Steimle, E.T. ; Hall, M.L. ; Dixon, B.
Author_Institution :
Aquatic Ecology & Invasive Species Branch, ERDC-Environ. Lab., Vicksburg, MS, USA
Abstract :
Rivers, estuaries, reservoirs, and lakes are multi-use systems that supply water for agricultural, industrial, and human consumption while simultaneously assimilating both point- and non-point source discharges. Existing methods of data collection are generally limited to snapshots in space and time while a comprehensive view of spatial variability remains elusive. Accelerating the integration of existing in-situ sensors, geospatial analysis techniques, and reliable autonomous sampling platform technologies provide immediate improvements for sampling and assessment programs. We provide a demonstration of this integration for high spatial resolution sampling and analysis in a non-wadeable river with an inexpensive unmanned sampling platform (USV), standards sensor arrays, and widely used geospatial techniques. These are used to creating 2-D maps of temperature, conductivity, salinity, turbidity, chlorophyll florescence and chromophoric dissolved organic matter (CDOM). 2-D surface water quality maps show significant influences on local water quality from tributary confluences, submarine groundwater plumes, floodplain/riparian interfaces and other patchily distributed limnological features. Moreover, this project demonstrates how sensors, autonomous vehicles, and geospatial technologies work in concert to create a more comprehensive spatial picture compared to the standard systematic sampling grid with data displayed as means and standard deviations.
Keywords :
geographic information systems; groundwater; hydrological techniques; lakes; remotely operated vehicles; reservoirs; rivers; turbidity; water quality; 2D surface water quality; Coastal Rivers; GIS technology; Gulf of Mexico; ROV technology; agricultural consumption; autonomous vehicles; chlorophyll florescence; chromophoric dissolved organic matter; data collection; estuaries; floodplain interfaces; geospatial analysis techniques; human consumption; industrial consumption; lakes; limnological features; local water quality; nonpoint source discharges; reservoirs; riparian interfaces; salinity; spatial variability; standard deviations; standards sensor arrays; submarine groundwater plumes; tributary confluences; turbidity; unmanned sampling platform; Geographic Information Systems; Lakes; Remotely operated vehicles; Reservoirs; Rivers; Sampling methods; Sea measurements; Sensor arrays; Space technology; Water resources;
Conference_Titel :
OCEANS 2009, MTS/IEEE Biloxi - Marine Technology for Our Future: Global and Local Challenges
Conference_Location :
Biloxi, MS
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-4960-6
Electronic_ISBN :
978-0-933957-38-1