Connectivity and impact assessment of land use/cover and benthic cover change by advance remote sensing analysis

College

Gokongwei College of Engineering

Department/Unit

Civil Engineering

Document Type

Archival Material/Manuscript

Publication Date

2005

Abstract

Aside from the effects of coral-bleaching at the su phenomenon and crown-of-thorns starfish (COTS) outbreaks, the coral reef ecosystem is slowly deteriorating through due to stress brought about by water pollution from surrounding nearby source. Sediment and nutrient discharge, as a result of anthropogenic Impacts on land, may hold the greatest influence in the condition of the coral reef. To effectively manage the coral reef system, it is worthwhile to understand the relationship between the coral reef and the land use activities at the surrounding watersheds. This paper aims to establish the connectivity between the terrestrial and the coastal waters through examination of the historical change pattern between the land and benthic covers by remote sensing analysis and to correlate the Impact of the sediment discharge to the benthic cover. Analyses were done for some of its zones and for some local coral reef areas near river mouths in the Sekisel Lagoon, Japan. Results show that local coral reef areas are more vulnerable to impact from sediment discharge, while the wider coverage zones in the Sekisel Lagoon recelves more impact from COTS and coral- bleaching events. Proximity from the sediment source and hydrodynamic circulation may have increased or decreased the impact of various threats in some areas of the Selisel Lagoon.

html

Disciplines

Civil and Environmental Engineering

Keywords

Land use—Remote sensing; Land cover—Remote sensing; Benthic ecology—Remote sensing; Environmental impact analysis

Upload File

wf_no

This document is currently not available here.

Share

COinS