Master Thesis Defense: “Development of Caribbean Seagrass Ecosystem Accounts fusing Earth Observation with Biophysical Modeling of Coastal Carbon” on Tuesday, March 19, 2024

On Tuesday, March 18,  at 15:00 Andrea Cárdenas Reyes will present her master thesis on “Development of Caribbean Seagrass Ecosystem Accounts fusing Earth Observation with Biophysical Modeling of Coastal Carbon” in seminar room 3, John-Skilton-Str. 4a.

 

Abstract: Understanding the distribution and changes in seagrass is a prerequisite for determining its carbon content and implementing conservation projects. In this study, using remote sensing techniques, the distribution and abundance of blue carbon in the seagrass meadows of the Economic Exclusive Zone (EEZ) of Belize was mapped between the years of 2016 – 2019 and 2020 – 2022. This was done using multitemporal composite images from the Sentinel-2 Level-2C Surface Reflectance Archive and basemaps from the PlanetScope images processed through the Google Earth Engine (GEE) cloud computing platform. The mapping efforts discovered a loss in seagrass extension all over the study area. This pattern of loss was identified in both classification maps. The biophysical modelling results are based on the Coastal Blue Carbon model by InVEST. We incorporate the results from the first step into this model, using literature review data on biomass, soil carbon, accumulation rates, and net sequestration as reference carbon data. This analysis gave us a first estimate of the carbon content in terms of carbon stocks and total net carbon sequestration in Belize.

 


1st Supervisor: Jakob Schwalb-Willmann

2nd Supervisor (external): Dimosthenis Traganos, DLR

 

read more news:

High alpine and snow training

High alpine and snow training

In collaboration with the German Alpine Club (DAV), Laura, one of our EAGLE students and Clara, a student assistant at our institute, recently participated in avalanche rescue training aimed at equipping individuals with essential skills and knowledge to respond...

semester wrap-up by our latest EAGLE generation

semester wrap-up by our latest EAGLE generation

Our latest generation of EAGLEs just wrote a nice blog post summarizing their first months within the EAGLE program, outlining how they bonded and formed a group plus how they experienced their first earth observation courses within our international M.Sc. program:...

International Day of Women and Girls in Science

International Day of Women and Girls in Science

We would like to celebrate the International Day of Women and Girls in Science with you! It is celebrated annually on February 11th. This day aims to promote full and equal access to science for women and girls, as well as to recognize the achievements of women in...

GRASS GIS introduced in our EAGLE MSc

GRASS GIS introduced in our EAGLE MSc

The very powerful and versatile spatial analysis program, GRASS, is introduced today within our EAGLE spatial data software course. GRASS provides a wide variety of functions, but just a few possibilities such as VI calculation, time-series or Python programming in...

Introduction to Whitebox software

Introduction to Whitebox software

The Whitebox geospatial software offers a wide range of functionality which are partly also not available in other packages, such as hydrological analysis or Lidar processing. Our earth observation EAGLE students are learning diverse geospatial software packages in...

Internship Networking event

Internship Networking event

Our EAGLEs have to conduct two internship and like to do them in quite diverse fields. Their research interests range from dry ecosystems to mountains, from conservation to agriculture, from the Arctic to Africa and from Earth Observation companies to large research...

UAS application in a biosphere reserve

UAS application in a biosphere reserve

Our EAGLE Helena Wehner presented her work in the Rhoen biosphere reserve where she tested the potential of low cost consumer drones for conservation.  She aimed at mapping animal tracks using photogrammetry approaches in snowy landscapes. The structure through...