Missing the Forest and the Trees: Utility, Limits and Caveats for Drone Imaging of Coastal Marine Ecosystems

Coastal marine ecosystems are under stress, yet actionable information about the cumulative effects of human impacts has eluded ecologists. Habitat-forming seaweeds in temperate regions provide myriad irreplaceable ecosystem services, but they are increasingly at risk of local and regional extinctio...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Leigh W. Tait, Shane Orchard, David R. Schiel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-08-01
Series:Remote Sensing
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/13/16/3136
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spelling doaj-78622b2a27274ed28671490ca7a8c3012021-08-26T14:17:24ZengMDPI AGRemote Sensing2072-42922021-08-01133136313610.3390/rs13163136Missing the Forest and the Trees: Utility, Limits and Caveats for Drone Imaging of Coastal Marine EcosystemsLeigh W. Tait0Shane Orchard1David R. Schiel2National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research, Kyle St., Riccarton, Christchurch 8011, New ZealandMarine Ecology Research Group, Canterbury University, Private Bag 4800, Christchurch 8140, New ZealandMarine Ecology Research Group, Canterbury University, Private Bag 4800, Christchurch 8140, New ZealandCoastal marine ecosystems are under stress, yet actionable information about the cumulative effects of human impacts has eluded ecologists. Habitat-forming seaweeds in temperate regions provide myriad irreplaceable ecosystem services, but they are increasingly at risk of local and regional extinction from extreme climatic events and the cumulative impacts of land-use change and extractive activities. Informing appropriate management strategies to reduce the impacts of stressors requires comprehensive knowledge of species diversity, abundance and distributions. Remote sensing undoubtedly provides answers, but collecting imagery at appropriate resolution and spatial extent, and then accurately and precisely validating these datasets is not straightforward. Comprehensive and long-running monitoring of rocky reefs exist globally but are often limited to a small subset of reef platforms readily accessible to in-situ studies. Key vulnerable habitat-forming seaweeds are often not well-assessed by traditional in-situ methods, nor are they well-captured by passive remote sensing by satellites. Here we describe the utility of drone-based methods for monitoring and detecting key rocky intertidal habitat types, the limitations and caveats of these methods, and suggest a standardised workflow for achieving consistent results that will fulfil the needs of managers for conservation efforts.https://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/13/16/3136intertidalseaweedbiodiversitydroneimagingmonitoring
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Leigh W. Tait
Shane Orchard
David R. Schiel
spellingShingle Leigh W. Tait
Shane Orchard
David R. Schiel
Missing the Forest and the Trees: Utility, Limits and Caveats for Drone Imaging of Coastal Marine Ecosystems
Remote Sensing
intertidal
seaweed
biodiversity
drone
imaging
monitoring
author_facet Leigh W. Tait
Shane Orchard
David R. Schiel
author_sort Leigh W. Tait
title Missing the Forest and the Trees: Utility, Limits and Caveats for Drone Imaging of Coastal Marine Ecosystems
title_short Missing the Forest and the Trees: Utility, Limits and Caveats for Drone Imaging of Coastal Marine Ecosystems
title_full Missing the Forest and the Trees: Utility, Limits and Caveats for Drone Imaging of Coastal Marine Ecosystems
title_fullStr Missing the Forest and the Trees: Utility, Limits and Caveats for Drone Imaging of Coastal Marine Ecosystems
title_full_unstemmed Missing the Forest and the Trees: Utility, Limits and Caveats for Drone Imaging of Coastal Marine Ecosystems
title_sort missing the forest and the trees: utility, limits and caveats for drone imaging of coastal marine ecosystems
publisher MDPI AG
series Remote Sensing
issn 2072-4292
publishDate 2021-08-01
description Coastal marine ecosystems are under stress, yet actionable information about the cumulative effects of human impacts has eluded ecologists. Habitat-forming seaweeds in temperate regions provide myriad irreplaceable ecosystem services, but they are increasingly at risk of local and regional extinction from extreme climatic events and the cumulative impacts of land-use change and extractive activities. Informing appropriate management strategies to reduce the impacts of stressors requires comprehensive knowledge of species diversity, abundance and distributions. Remote sensing undoubtedly provides answers, but collecting imagery at appropriate resolution and spatial extent, and then accurately and precisely validating these datasets is not straightforward. Comprehensive and long-running monitoring of rocky reefs exist globally but are often limited to a small subset of reef platforms readily accessible to in-situ studies. Key vulnerable habitat-forming seaweeds are often not well-assessed by traditional in-situ methods, nor are they well-captured by passive remote sensing by satellites. Here we describe the utility of drone-based methods for monitoring and detecting key rocky intertidal habitat types, the limitations and caveats of these methods, and suggest a standardised workflow for achieving consistent results that will fulfil the needs of managers for conservation efforts.
topic intertidal
seaweed
biodiversity
drone
imaging
monitoring
url https://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/13/16/3136
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AT shaneorchard missingtheforestandthetreesutilitylimitsandcaveatsfordroneimagingofcoastalmarineecosystems
AT davidrschiel missingtheforestandthetreesutilitylimitsandcaveatsfordroneimagingofcoastalmarineecosystems
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