Spatio-Temporal Heterogeneity and Cumulative Ecological Impacts of Coastal Reclamation in Coastal Waters
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Area
2.2. Data Source
2.3. Defining and Identifying Method of the MWBB
2.3.1. A New Definition of the ‘Coastline’
2.3.2. The Method for Identifying the MWBB
2.4. Ecological Cumulative Impact Assessment Model of Reclamation
2.4.1. Assessing System
2.4.2. Spatial Mapping
2.5. Analysis of Driving Factors of Reclamation
3. Results
3.1. Spatio-Temporal Characteristics of Reclamation
3.1.1. Changes in the MWBB in Near Coastal Waters
3.1.2. Changes in Reclamation
3.2. Assessment on the RCEI
3.2.1. Evaluation Results
3.2.2. Evaluation and Verification Results
3.3. Analysis on the Driving Mechanism of Reclamation
4. Discussion
4.1. Uncertainty of RCEI
4.1.1. The Applicability and Limitation of Model
4.1.2. Model Sensitivity
4.1.3. Sources of Model Uncertainty
4.2. Economy and Urbanization Drivers
4.3. Management Implications
4.3.1. Industrial Development
4.3.2. Ecological Protection Suggestions
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Region | Year | Image Sensor | Path/Row | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Bohai Sea | 1985, 1994, 2003, 1998–2018 | Landsat5 TM, Landsat8 OLI. | 120/034, 122/033, 121/032, 120/033, | 121/034, 121/033, 120/032, 119/033 |
Boundary Types of Movable Water Bodies | Spatial Location | Remote Sensing Information (Fusion of Bands 3, 4, and 5) | |
---|---|---|---|
Natural boundary (including bedrock boundary and sandy boundary) | Trace line of direct meeting of land and water | Bedrock boundary: The remote sensing images have a high reflectivity white color tone and are surrounded by vegetation [21]. Sandy boundary: The reflection on remote sensing images of sandy gravel bank and beach, which are formed over time, is higher than that of other features, and their textures are white and uniform [22]. | |
Reclamation boundary | Boundary of the pond dam | Boundary of the pond dam | If there are engineering facilities that protect salt pans, aquaculture ponds, and reservoirs, the aquaculture pond is dark blue on the remote sensing image, with uniform color, clear texture, flaky or striped distribution [22]; the salt field is uneven bright blue, with a clear texture, flaky distribution, and vegetation coverage; the boundary of reservoir is clear, with a gray dam. |
Boundary of protective dam | Contour line of the dam on the sea side | If there are engineering facilities and linear dams that protect the reclaimed land area, the land reclamation has uneven color and clear internal textures; the linear dams have clear and gray textures, with generally small widths, and are distributed in places where water and land meet directly. | |
Industrial and urban boundary | Contour line on the sea side | The boundaries are clear, including urban residential areas, industrial areas, and roads, with clear internal texture and uneven color, which is easy to identify on remote sensing images. | |
Marine construction boundary | Extracted contour line on the sea side if there is a port wharf or an impervious offshore structure | The boundaries are clear and easy to identify, with ports and wharves, impervious offshore structures (breakwaters and submarine tunnels), and permeable marine structures (cross-sea bridges) included, which are distributed mainly near urban and industrial areas; offshore structures have blurred, gray textures that are mostly in strips and perpendicular to the land. On the basis of the projected images of the offshore buildings from Google Maps and the continuity of the water waves on both sides, the water permeability is identified. |
Reclamation Types | Evaluation and Survey Work of the Researcher |
---|---|
Infilling reclamation (e.g., industrial and urban area) | 1. Shifts in the spatial extent, configuration, and dynamics of natural habitats by altering sediment dynamics and geomorphic connectivity [26]. 2. Permanent change of the geomorphology of the coastal line and the physical processes of the coastal system [27]. 3. Production of pollutants from ports and factories as well as nutrients and pesticides from croplands, resulting in deterioration of inshore and oceanic environments and severely reduced biodiversity [11]. 4. Habitat loss and sediment burial [28]. 5. Sediment dynamics and hydrodynamics were weakened [15]. 6. Destruction of habitats for fish; reduced water purification ability from narrowing and even disappearance of gulf and bay area, increased water pollution, and frequent harmful algal blooms [29]. 7. Shrinking of the tidal mudfats; loss of marine habitat; reduction of the adaptive capacity of shoreline ecological communities to sea level rise [10]. |
Enclosing reclamation (e.g., pond) | 8. Same as article 6. 9. Same as article 7. 10. Production of pollutants from ponds and chemicals, such as antibiotics, resulting in deterioration of inshore and oceanic environments [29]. 11. Modification of flows of energy and materials [30]. 12. In mariculture ponds, large number of residual bait, dead fish, and shrimp would sink to the bottom of the ponds, and high-concentration organic wastes would be discharged into the surrounding water bodies [31]. |
Marine construction (e.g., harbor, seawall, bridge) | 13. Same as article 4. 14. Port area would collect discharge large amount of oily wastewater from ships docking in [32]. 15. Noise pollution caused by shipping activity in ports and marinas showed the greatest extent of modification, affecting seascapes at regional scales [32]. 16. Physical barriers to the movement of organisms, materials, and/or energy within and among habitats [31]. 17. The hydrodynamic is significantly modified by a bridge piling [32]. |
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Lu, J.; Lv, X.; Shi, H. Spatio-Temporal Heterogeneity and Cumulative Ecological Impacts of Coastal Reclamation in Coastal Waters. Remote Sens. 2023, 15, 1495. https://doi.org/10.3390/rs15061495
Lu J, Lv X, Shi H. Spatio-Temporal Heterogeneity and Cumulative Ecological Impacts of Coastal Reclamation in Coastal Waters. Remote Sensing. 2023; 15(6):1495. https://doi.org/10.3390/rs15061495
Chicago/Turabian StyleLu, Jingfang, Xianqing Lv, and Honghua Shi. 2023. "Spatio-Temporal Heterogeneity and Cumulative Ecological Impacts of Coastal Reclamation in Coastal Waters" Remote Sensing 15, no. 6: 1495. https://doi.org/10.3390/rs15061495
APA StyleLu, J., Lv, X., & Shi, H. (2023). Spatio-Temporal Heterogeneity and Cumulative Ecological Impacts of Coastal Reclamation in Coastal Waters. Remote Sensing, 15(6), 1495. https://doi.org/10.3390/rs15061495