EGU21-13031
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13031
EGU General Assembly 2021
© Author(s) 2021. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Satellite-derived shorelines reveal fascinating dynamics for the last three decades on Danube Delta coast

Florin Tatui1,2,3, Georgiana Anghelin1,4, and Sorin Constantin2,3,4
Florin Tatui et al.
  • 1University of Bucharest, Faculty of Geography, Bucharest, Romania (florin.tatui@geo.unibuc.ro)
  • 2Research Institute of the University of Bucharest (ICUB), Bucharest, Romania
  • 3Sfantu Gheorghe Marine and Fluvial Research Station, University of Bucharest, Romania
  • 4Terrasigna, Bucharest, Romania

Shoreline, as the interface between the upper shoreface and the beach-dune system, is sensitive to all changes from both the underwater and sub-aerial parts of the beach at a wide range of temporal scales (seconds to decades), making it a good indicator for coastal health. While more traditional techniques of shoreline monitoring present some shortcomings (low temporal resolution for photointerpretation, reduced spatial extension for video-based techniques, high costs for DGPS in-situ data acquisition), freely available satellite images can provide information for large areas (tens/hundreds of km) at very good temporal scales (days).

We employed a shoreline detection workflow for the dynamic environment of the Danube Delta coast (Black Sea). We focused on an index-based approach using the Automated Water Extraction Index (AWEI). A fully automated procedure was deployed for data processing and the waterline was estimated at sub-pixel level with an adapted image thresholding technique. For validation purposes, 5 Sentinel-2 and 5 Landsat based results were compared with both in-situ (D)GPS measurements and manually digitized shoreline positions from very high-resolution satellite images (Pleiades – 0.5 m and Spot 7 – 1.5 m). The overall accuracy of the methodology, expressed as mean absolute error, was found to be of approximately 7.5 m for Sentinel-2 and 4.7 m for Landsat data, respectively.

More than 200 Landsat (5 and 8) and Sentinel-2 images were processed and the corresponding satellite-derived shorelines between 1990 and 2020 were analysed for the whole Romanian Danube Delta coast (130 km). This high number of shorelines allowed us the discrimination of different patterns of coastline dynamic and behaviour which could not have been possible using usual surveying techniques: the extent of accumulation areas induced by the 2005-2006 historical river floods, the impact of different high-energy storms and the subsequent beach recovery after these events, the alongshore movement of erosional processes in accordance with the dominant direction of longshore sediment transport, multi-annual differences in both erosional and accumulation trends. Moreover, a very important result of our analysis is the zonation of Danube Delta coast based on multi-annual trends of shoreline dynamics at finer alongshore spatial resolution than before. This has significant implications for future studies dealing with different scenarios of Danube Delta response to projected sea level rise and increased storminess.

The presented approach and resulting products offer optimal combination of data availability, accuracy and frequency necessary to meet the monitoring and management needs of the increasing number of stakeholders involved in the coastal zone protection activities.

How to cite: Tatui, F., Anghelin, G., and Constantin, S.: Satellite-derived shorelines reveal fascinating dynamics for the last three decades on Danube Delta coast, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13031, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13031, 2021.

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