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Remote sensing data as a tool to monitor and mitigate natural catastrophes resulting from anthropogenic activities
Summary
This thesis demonstrates how satellite remote sensing can be used to monitor environmental problems caused by human activities, including applications for detecting and tracking plastic debris and microplastics in both terrestrial and aquatic environments.
This thesis demonstrates how remotely sensed satellite acquisitions can be used to addresses some of the natural catastrophes resulting from anthropogenic activities. Examples from both land and water systems are used to illustrate the breath of this toolbox. The effects of global climate change on biological systems and the wellbeing of everyday people are becoming less easy to ignore. In addition, our oceans are facing multiple large-scale stressors, including microplastics as a recently recognized threat, which place at risk the resources which a large percentage of the world’s population depends on for their livelihood. The cause of many of these changes stem from anthropogenic activities, but lacking understanding of complex ecosystems limits our ability to make definite conclusions as to cause and effect. The difficulty to collect on-the-ground data sufficient enough to capture processes working over scales of hundred of kilometers up to the entire globe is often a limitation to research. Remote sensing systems help ameliorate this issue through providing tools to better monitor environmental changes over large areas. The examples provided in this thesis focus on (Section I) tropical peatland fire characteristics and burning in Southeast Asia as a significant contributor to greenhouse gas emissions and (Section II) spread of river-based plastic pollution in coastal ocean systems. Section I specifically focuses on fires within Indonesia, which holds more than half of all known peatlands in the tropical zone and are estimated to represent a carbon pool of 82–92 gigatons. A brief description of recent development activities within Indonesia is presented in Section I of the Introduction, followed by meteorological processes responsible for extended drought periods in the region, and the situation of current fire control within the country. Chapter 1 presents an example of the large improvement in fire detection, as well as measurement of fire front characteristics, provided by a state-of-the-art thermal remote sensing. Chapter 2 goes into detail describing how an active satellite sensor system is able to provide much quicker and more accurate estimates of burned area for the tropics than other existing methods dependent on passive satellite sensor systems. Both these methods provide powerful tools for development of an improved system to monitor fire over Indonesia. The goal of such a monitoring system would be to reduce fire emissions from this large country, which according to global climate models play an important role in global climate change. Section II focuses on aquatic plastic pollution flowing from a freshwater system into the coastal oceans. A background of the issue of plastic pollution along with the current status of plastic debris in both oceans and inland river systems is presented in Section II of the Introduction. Chapter 3 describes development and comparison of two different modelling efforts to display how plastic particles being emitted from a major river are accumulating along the nearby coastline. The goal of this work is to present how remote sensing data could be used to in conjunction with ocean current modelling to create a comprehensive particle tracking monitoring system.