Automatic extraction of water inundation areas using sentinel-1 data for large plain areas

Hu, Shunshi and Qin, Jianxin and Ren, Jinchang and Zhao, Huimin and Ren, Jie and Hong, Haoran (2020) Automatic extraction of water inundation areas using sentinel-1 data for large plain areas. Remote Sensing, 12 (2). 243. ISSN 2072-4292 (https://doi.org/10.3390/rs12020243)

[thumbnail of Hu-etal-RS-2020-Automatic-extraction-of-water-inundation-areas-using-sentinel-1-data]
Preview
Text. Filename: Hu_etal_RS_2020_Automatic_extraction_of_water_inundation_areas_using_sentinel_1_data.pdf
Final Published Version
License: Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 logo

Download (6MB)| Preview

Abstract

Accurately quantifying water inundation dynamics in terms of both spatial distributions and temporal variability is essential for water resources management. Currently, the water map is usually derived from synthetic aperture radar (SAR) data with the support of auxiliary datasets, using thresholding methods and followed by morphological operations to further refine the results. However, auxiliary datasets may lose efficacy on large plain areas, whilst the parameters of morphological operations are hard to be decided in different situations. Here, a heuristic and automatic water extraction (HAWE) method is proposed to extract the water map from Sentinel-1 SAR data. In the HAWE, we integrate tile-based thresholding and the active contour model, in which the former provides a convincing initial water map used as a heuristic input, and the latter refines the initial map by using image gradient information. The proposed approach was tested on the Dongting Lake plain (China) by comparing the extracted water map with the reference data derived from the Sentinel-2 dataset. For the two selected test sites, the overall accuracy of water classification is between 94.90% and 97.21% whilst the Kappa coefficient is within the range of 0.89 and 0.94. For the entire study area, the overall accuracy is between 94.32% and 96.7% and the Kappa coefficient ranges from 0.80 to 0.90. The results show that the proposed method is capable of extracting water inundations with satisfying accuracy.