Article

Widespread phytoplankton monitoring in small lakes: a case study comparing satellite imagery from planet SuperDoves and ESA sentinel-2

Details

Citation

Atton Beckmann D, Spyrakos E, Hunter P & Jones ID (2025) Widespread phytoplankton monitoring in small lakes: a case study comparing satellite imagery from planet SuperDoves and ESA sentinel-2. Frontiers in Remote Sensing, 6. https://doi.org/10.3389/frsen.2025.1549119

Abstract
Satellite imagery has enabled widespread monitoring of algae in larger water bodies, however until recently, the spatial resolution of available sensors has not been sufficient to apply this to smaller lakes. Therefore, this study investigated a new dataset of high-resolution metre-scale imagery for monitoring phytoplankton at spatial and temporal scales previously impossible with satellite data. Specifically, the Planet SuperDoves constellation was used to monitor a small (0.069 km2), eutrophic lake from 2021 to 2024. Several chlorophyll-a (Chl-a) algorithms were tested on both SuperDoves and Sentinel-2 data against in situ measurements. Additionally, the suitability of citizen science data as a validation tool for widespread algal bloom monitoring was investigated by comparing reports of algal blooms in five small water bodies in central Scotland with corresponding SuperDoves Chl-a images. Chl-a was successfully retrieved using the Ocean Colour 3 algorithm (R2 = 0.64, root mean squared error (RMSE) = 0.93 g L−1), which outperformed the best performing Sentinel-2 Chl-a algorithm (R2 = 0.61, RMSE = 1.01 g L−1). Furthermore, both Sentinel-2 and SuperDoves data were equally effective for algal bloom detection, each having F1-scores of 0.89 at a Chl-a bloom threshold of 40 g L−1. This demonstrates that metre-scale satellite monitoring of algae is possible even in challenging and optically complex environments such as small, shallow water bodies. This leads towards a potential step-change in the number of remotely monitorable inland water bodies, which would be a significant advancement for global lake science, environmental management and public health protection efforts.

Keywords
algal blooms; cyanobacteria; sentinel-2; freshwater; planetscope; citizen science

Journal
Frontiers in Remote Sensing: Volume 6

StatusPublished
Publication date online31/03/2025
Date accepted by journal07/03/2025
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/37208
PublisherFrontiers Media SA
ISSN2673-6187
eISSN2673-6187

People (4)

Mr Daniel Atton Beckmann

Mr Daniel Atton Beckmann

PhD Researcher, Biological and Environmental Sciences

Professor Peter Hunter

Professor Peter Hunter

Professor, Biological and Environmental Sciences

Dr Ian Jones

Dr Ian Jones

Lecturer in Environmental Sensing, Biological and Environmental Sciences

Professor Evangelos Spyrakos

Professor Evangelos Spyrakos

Professor, Biological and Environmental Sciences

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