• Title of article

    Spectral reflectance of coral reef bottom-types worldwide and implications for coral reef remote sensing

  • Author/Authors

    Hochberg، نويسنده , , Eric J and Atkinson، نويسنده , , Marlin J and Andréfouët، نويسنده , , Serge، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
  • Pages
    15
  • From page
    159
  • To page
    173
  • Abstract
    Coral reef benthic communities are mosaics of individual bottom-types that are distinguished by their taxonomic composition and functional roles in the ecosystem. Knowledge of community structure is essential to understanding many reef processes. To develop techniques for identification and mapping of reef bottom-types using remote sensing, we measured 13,100 in situ optical reflectance spectra (400–700 nm, 1-nm intervals) of 12 basic reef bottom-types in the Atlantic, Pacific, and Indian Oceans: fleshy (1) brown, (2) green, and (3) red algae; non-fleshy (4) encrusting calcareous and (5) turf algae; (6) bleached, (7) blue, and (8) brown hermatypic coral; (9) soft/gorgonian coral; (10) seagrass; (11) terrigenous mud; and (12) carbonate sand. Each bottom-type exhibits characteristic spectral reflectance features that are conservative across biogeographic regions. Most notable are the brightness of carbonate sand and local extrema near 570 nm in blue (minimum) and brown (maximum) corals. Classification function analyses for the 12 bottom-types achieve mean accuracies of 83%, 76%, and 71% for full-spectrum data (301-wavelength), 52-wavelength, and 14-wavelength subsets, respectively. The distinguishing spectral features for the 12 bottom-types exist in well-defined, narrow (10–20 nm) wavelength ranges and are ubiquitous throughout the world. We reason that spectral reflectance features arise primarily as a result of spectral absorption processes. Radiative transfer modeling shows that in typically clear coral reef waters, dark substrates such as corals have a depth-of-detection limit on the order of 10–20 m. Our results provide the foundation for design of a sensor with the purpose of assessing the global status of coral reefs.
  • Keywords
    Coral reef , Remote sensing , radiative transfer , Spectral reflectance
  • Journal title
    Remote Sensing of Environment
  • Serial Year
    2003
  • Journal title
    Remote Sensing of Environment
  • Record number

    1574177