Publication | Closed Access
Relating spectral shape to cyanobacterial blooms in the Laurentian Great Lakes
288
Citations
11
References
2008
Year
EngineeringOceanographyCyanobacteriaEarth ScienceLimnologySocial SciencesLaurentian Great LakesBiogeographyPhotosynthesisSpectral ImagingFluorescence SignalPhytoplankton EcologySitu DataSpectral ShapeBenthic-pelagic CouplingSpectroscopyBloom EcologyRemote SensingOptical Remote SensingPaleoecologyLarge Cyanobacterial Blooms
A change in the spectral shape at 681 nm is used to distinguish blooms of cyanobacteria from blooms of other phytoplankton via MERIS satellite sensor imagery. During large cyanobacterial blooms, the spectral shape around 681 nm is not a positive quantity as scattering due to cyanobacteria overwhelms the fluorescence signal, thus creating a negative spectral shape. This relationship is consistent in both remotely sensed and in situ data.
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