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ORIGINAL RESEARCH article

Front. Remote Sens., 30 June 2022
Sec. Multi- and Hyper-Spectral Imaging
This article is part of the Research Topic Uncertainties and Challenges in Water Color Remote Sensing in Coastal and Inland Waters View all 9 articles

Autonomous Shipborne In Situ Reflectance Data in Optically Complex Coastal Waters: A Case Study of the Salish Sea, Canada

  • Department of Geography, University of Victoria, Victoria, BC, Canada

Present limitations on using satellite imagery to derive accurate chlorophyll concentrations and phytoplankton functional types arise from insufficient in situ measurements to validate the satellite reflectance, Rrs0+. We installed a set of hyperspectral radiometers with autonomous solar tracking capability, collectively named SAS Solar Tracker (Satlantic Inc./Sea-Bird), on top of a commercial ferry, to measure the in situ reflectance as the ferry crosses the Salish Sea, Canada. We describe the SAS Solar Tracker installation procedure, which enables a clear view of the sea surface and minimizes the interference caused by the ship superstructure. Corrections for residual ship superstructure perturbations and non-nadir-viewing geometry are applied during data processing to ensure optimal data quality. It is found that the ship superstructure perturbation correction decreased the overall Rrs0+ by 0.00055 sr−1, based on a black-pixel assumption for the infrared band of the lowest acquired turbid water. The BRDF correction using the inherent optical properties approach lowered the spectral signal by ∼5–10%, depending on the wavelength. Data quality was evaluated according to a quality assurance method considering spectral shape similarity, and ∼92% of the acquired reflectance data matched well against the global database, indicating high quality.

1 Introduction

Ocean color satellite sensors are a practical approach for large-scale synoptic monitoring of aquatic environments by providing bio-optical variables such as chlorophyll concentration (a direct proxy for phytoplankton biomass) and inherent optical properties (Sathyendranath et al., 2017; Werdell et al., 2018; Groom et al., 2019). However, proper vicarious calibration (space sensor calibration) and atmospheric correction of top-of-atmosphere measured radiance (LTOA) are required to retrieve accurate water-leaving radiance (Lw) and, consequently, remote sensing reflectance (Rrs0+) and biogeochemical products (Zibordi et al., 2015a; 2015b). For space sensor calibration, Fiducial Reference Measurements (FRMs), which come with uncertainty budgets including those for sensors calibration and high-quality protocols for data acquisition, are ultimately required (Ruddick et al., 2019). Long-term international programs providing FRMs are, for example, the Marine Optical Buoy (MOBY), the Buoy for the Acquisition of a Long-Term Optical Time Series (Bouée pour L’acquisition de Séries Optiques à Long Terme, BOUSSOLE), the NASA bio-Optical Algorithm Data set (NOMAD), the Ocean Reflectance Models (ORM), and the Ocean Color component of the Aerosol Robotic Network (AERONET-OC). Generally, these programs have provided a range of 46–241 high-quality matchups over 3–7 years for vicarious calibration of various ocean color satellites (Zibordi et al., 2015b). For addressing the atmospheric signal from LTOA, high-quality in situ radiometric data are also required for the development and validation of optimal atmospheric correction models (Ruddick et al., 2006; Ahmad et al., 2010; Müller et al., 2015; Carswell et al., 2017; Zibordi et al., 2018; Giannini et al., 2021). Atmospherically-corrected Lw and Rrs0+ are generally validated in comparison with in situ matchups acquired with radiometers installed on moored buoys (e.g., Antoine et al., 2008), stationary platforms (e.g., Zibordi et al., 2006, 2009; Vansteenwegen et al., 2019; Tilstone et al., 2020; Vanhellemont and Ruddick 2021), and mobile platforms such as research vessels and ship of opportunities (e.g., Simis and Olsson, 2013; Brando et al., 2016; Carswell et al., 2017; Ottaviani et al., 2018; Tilstone et al., 2020; Giannini et al., 2021). Among mobile platforms, deploying sensors aboard research vessels is the most common approach and requires different levels of human interaction to provide optimal geometry for data acquisition. For instance, Ruddick et al. (2006), Carswell et al. (2017), Phillips and Costa (2017), and Tilstone et al. (2020) adjusted the geometry as required according to the Sun and vessel position. Hooker et al. (2012), Simis and Olsson (2013), Brando et al. (2016), and Ottaviani et al. (2018) deployed instead radiometers with the autonomous capability of defining optimal geometry based on real-time Sun position and ship orientation.

Within the scope of autonomous measurements from stationary and mobile platforms, predefined optimal geometry of acquisition, flagging of non-optimal environmental conditions, data correction for the effects of Sun glint and skylight contributions, and structure interferences are the most important to obtain high-quality Rrs0+ measurements (Hooker and Morel, 2003; Zibordi et al., 2006; Zibordi et al., 2009; Simis and Olsson, 2013; Zibordi et al., 2015a; Ottaviani et al., 2018). First, maintaining optimal viewing geometry is a considerable challenge in shipborne reflectance measurement as the ship and the Sun are constantly moving. The general ideal geometry of acquisition, as recommended in the literature, is as follows: a viewing zenith angle (θv) of the upwelling radiance sensor (Lt) of 40o and a viewing azimuth angle (φv) between the sensors and the Sun of 90 o < φv < 135 o (ideally 135 o) to minimize Sun glint (Mobley, 1999; Simis and Olsson, 2013). At the same time, the sensors should be deployed to avoid the effect of ship shadow, sea spray, and minimize ship superstructure perturbation (Mobley, 1999; Hooker and Morel, 2003; Ottaviani et al., 2018). Second, the instantaneous cloud cover conditions affect the spectral (ir)radiance distributions from the Sun and sky, thus resulting in variation in measurements of sky radiance and in the sky glint contribution to the upwelling radiance (Mobley, 1999; Ruddick et al., 2006). Therefore, clear sky conditions are ideal for high-quality measurements. As such, meteorological flags need to be applied. Finally, the presence of a fixed platform or the research vessel itself modifies the radiance field, since the platform shadow or multiple reflections between the superstructure and the water can fall into the sensor’s field of view (Hooker and Morel, 2003).

Here, we provide a framework for the acquisition, processing, and quality control of above-water remote sensing reflectance acquired with the SAS Solar Tracker (Satlantic Inc./Sea-Bird, denoted as SAS-ST). This autonomous sensor is installed aboard a ship of opportunity, the Queen of Oak Bay (QoOB) ferry, which crosses multiple times each day the Salish Sea off the west coast of Canada. The data processing included screening via meteorological flags, reflected sky radiance correction, superstructure signal correction, and BRDF corrections, followed by quality control of Rrs0+ based on method by Wei et al. (2016). The defined framework was based on published protocols (Mobley, 1999; Hooker and Morel, 2003; Simis and Olsson, 2013), and adapted for acquiring high-quality Rrs0+ measurements according to the local conditions. The purpose of these measurements is to provide matchups for validation of satellite-derived atmospheric corrected Rrs0+, and the development of regional hyperspectral-based bio-optical models for deriving biogeochemical products (e.g., phytoplankton functional types). Off the west coast of Canada, the number of available matchups is restricted due to the limited research vessel trips, required labor on the ships of opportunity to manually adjust the radiometer’s geometry (Komick et al., 2009; Carswell et al., 2017) and the frequent cloud coverage (Hilborn and Costa, 2018). Therefore, the successful operation of the autonomous SAS-ST is very desirable in this area. The methodology presented here is adaptable to other regions of the world lacking in situ reflectance data, and provides a step forward to complement a network of fixed platforms above-water sensors such as AERONET-OC (Zibordi et al., 2009) and WATERHYPERNET (Vanhellemont and Ruddick, 2021).

2 Materials and Methods

2.1 Study Area

The Salish Sea is an estuarine system in the southwest of Canada, extending about 200 km in length by 30 km in width with an average depth of 150 m (Figure 1A). It is composed of the Strait of Georgia (SoG), the Puget Sound, and the Juan de Fuca Strait, and it is connected to the Pacific Ocean via the Juan de Fuca Strait in the South and the Johnstone Strait in the North. Since the northern passage is very constricted, most of the water exchange between the Salish Sea and the Pacific waters flows through the southern passage (Masson, 2002; Pawlowicz et al., 2019). A vital feature of the SoG is the significant freshwater inputs from the Fraser River (Johannessen et al., 2003; Yunker and Macdonald, 2003), which drive southward estuarine circulation, and the corresponding river plume extends into and occasionally entirely across the central and southern SoG (Li et al., 2000; Halverson and Pawlowicz, 2008, 2011; Pawlowicz et al., 2017, 2019). The river plume has a high concentration of total suspended matter (TSM) and colored dissolved organic matter (CDOM) due to its terrestrial origin, which produces optically complex waters with the highest light attenuation, particularly in the spring and summer times (Loos and Costa, 2010). The discharge of the Fraser River typically peaks with a freshet in mid-June following snowpack melt (Masson, 2002; Masson, 2006).

FIGURE 1
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FIGURE 1. (A) The Salish Sea study area. The red line indicates the track of QoOB. Two yellow dots are Entrance Island (49.21 N, 123.81 W) and Halibut Bank (49.34 N, 123.72 W) for local wind measurement. (B) The SAS-ST is installed on the deck of QoOB (red circle) at a total height of 19 m above the water surface. (C) The SAS-ST is mounted on top of a custom-fabricated pedestal, and the base of the pedestal is bolted to a welded stand.

Biologically, the Salish Sea typically has maximum diatom-dominated spring blooms followed by weaker fall bloom events (Allen and Wolfe, 2013). The timing of the spring phytoplankton bloom varies interannually and is mediated by light availability due to cloud cover, wind dynamics, and timing of spring freshwater outflow (Collins et al., 2009; Masson and Peña, 2009; Allen and Wolfe, 2013; Phillips and Costa, 2017; Suchy et al., 2019). The second most abundant phytoplankton group in this region is dinoflagellates, peaking in the summer and early fall (Pospelova et al., 2010). Calcifying phytoplankton, such as coccolithophore (Emiliania huxleyi), uncommon within the SoG (Haigh et al., 2015), were observed to flourish in July and August of 2016 when SAS-ST acquired data for the research presented here. With the high particulate discharge from the Fraser River, the Salish Sea is thus an optically dynamic coastal system (Loos and Costa, 2010).

2.2 Dataset

Here, we describe the installation of the SAS-ST on QoOB and data acquisition and processing. Biogeochemical data from BC FerryBox, which automatically measures a series of environmental oceanographic parameters, aided in the ferry’s perturbation correction approach and the characterization of the water spectral types.

2.2.1 SAS Solar Tracker Installation and Acquisition Geometry

The SAS-ST was installed on a commercial ferry, BC Ferries QoOB, about 139 m long and 27 m wide. The ferry sails at approximately 20 knots (10.3 m/s) from Departure Bay, Nanaimo, to Horseshoe Bay, West Vancouver, BC, totaling a distance of about 55 km (Figure 1A). The SAS-ST is mounted 19 m above the water surface on top of a custom-fabricated pedestal designed by Ocean Networks Canada (ONC), and the base of the pedestal is bolted to a welded stand (Figures 1B,C). The SAS-ST is equipped with a drive unit as a base and thus has the advantage of solar tracking capability, which permits autonomous operation to maintain optimal viewing geometry (Satlantic, 2016). The SAS-ST consists of two hyperspectral radiometers to measure sea surface total upwelling radiance, Lt(λ) and sky radiance, Li(λ), with a 3° half-angle field of view (FOV) and a third sensor to measure the upper hemisphere downwelling irradiance, Es(λ) (Figure 2A). For an overview of symbols used in this paper see Table 1. These sensors perform automated measurements up to a frequency of 3Hz and automatically adjust their integration time to the instantaneously measured light intensity (Satlantic, 2016; Tilstone et al., 2020). In addition to the three radiometers and the drive unit, a GPS receiver and a junction box (including power and communication components) are mounted onto the SAS-ST system. The true ship heading data are acquired by a Hemisphere Vector GPS sensor installed by ONC beside SAS-ST, and process signals from two GPS antennas to determine the true ship heading. These data are fed into the SAS-ST’s acquisition module housed in the junction box. The auxiliary GPS was required because the metal structure of the ferry causes the internal SAS-ST GPS’s heading measurement to lack the necessary accuracy. The SAS-ST serial data stream and auxiliary GPS heading measurement are sent to a serial-to-Ethernet converter, served on the ONC local area network (LAN) on a transmission control protocol (TCP) port. Mounted in the ONC telemetry box is a small computer that runs a driver developed on a Linux operating system. It has Ethernet connectivity and collects SAS-ST data from the LAN, stores the data, and sends them to ONC’s server onshore. This setup allows data to be downloaded in near real-time directly from ONC’s Oceans 2.0 portal (https://data.oceannetworks.ca/DataSearch).

FIGURE 2
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FIGURE 2. (A) SAS-ST geometry of acquisition. Red bars are the three radiometers with θv = 50°. The solar zenith angle θs is about 30° at the time of data acquisition in spring and summer. (B) Position of SAS-ST regarding the ferry and Sun. The red bar indicates the SAS-ST, blue indicates water, the orange stripe indicates the Lt footprint, and the gray area indicates ship shadow as far as 14 m from the ship wall. γ is 90°–140°, and α is -15° to -50° in this research. Note that the ferry is not at scale.

TABLE 1
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TABLE 1. Symbols used in this paper.

To avoid the effects of Sun glint and reduce ship shadow and ship superstructure influence, the Lt(λ) and Li(λ) sensors were positioned at a fixed viewing zenith angle, θv = 50o, and programmed to maintain a sensor-Sun azimuth φv = 120 ± 5°, following Hooker and Morel (2003) (Figure 2A). The value of θv was adapted from the optimal guidelines to keep the FOV of the Lt sensor further away from the ferry and avoid ship shadow, while φv was chosen around 120°, roughly the median of 90°–135°, to allow the drive unit to operate within a range of angles. These parameters are programmed as part of the “deployment setup” (see Supplementary Appendix A, Section 1) before the system starts acquiring data and can be changed as needed. To attain the optimal geometric conditions, the ferry run from 12:50 to 14:30 local time was designated for data acquisition during spring and summer.

The preset φv is maintained using the autonomous stepper motor platform that triggers the required positioning according to the ship heading and the Sun azimuth. The geometric setup was planned for the ferry run that approximately coincides with the time of imagery acquisition by several operational ocean color satellites. First, for the optimal time of data acquisition (12:50 to 14:30 LT), the Sun azimuth angle relative to the ferry heading, indicated as γ in Figure 2B, changed within the 90°–140° range, with the Sun always at starboard. This is important because the port side, where the SAS-ST was installed, was not directly illuminated by the Sun, so that the ship reflections in the region where the Lt FOV falls (orange area in Figure 2B) are minimized. The defined geometry of acquisition adjusted optimal guidelines (Mobley, 1999) to local conditions, and the data analysis followed the protocol of Hooker and Morel (2003) to minimize the interference of the white wall of the ship (Section 2.2.2.4). Moreover, based on the solar geometry at typical times of acquisition (θs ≈ 30°), a ship’s shadow measuring 14 m in extent (gray area in Figure 2B) was predicted to be cast at the port side, a fact which was confirmed during the field observations. The ship’s shadow was within the FOV of the Lt sensor when the rotator angle (denoted as α, with reference to the home position) was lower than −50°. Therefore, any SAS-ST data acquired at α lower than −50° were filtered out from further analysis.

2.2.2 SAS Solar Tracker Data Processing

This section explains the data calibration and the meteorological flags used to preprocess the raw SAS-ST data. After the calibration and the application of the screening flags, data were subjected to sky and Sun glint, ship perturbation, and BRDF corrections.

2.2.2.1 Calibration and Flags

An application with batch-mode capability, PySciDON (Python Scientific Framework for Development of Ocean Network application; Vandenberg et al., 2017), was developed by our research group to apply the calibration files to the raw data stream for each sensor. The software accounts for the rotator angle and Sun azimuth angle flag, time and wavelength interpolation, longitude or time binning, meteorological flags, Mobley’s wind-based ρs factor correction (Mobley, 1999), and the correction for the ship superstructure perturbation. This application also provides band simulations for Sentinel-3 and MODIS-Aqua (not used in this paper) and general statistical tools, including mean, median, and standard deviation for the specified binning mode. Sensors were freshly calibrated before deployment (and optics were cleaned bi-weekly during deployment), and the calibration files from Satlantic Inc. provide descriptions of the format of the raw data files. More details can be found in Vandenberg et al. (2017) and Satlantic Inc.’s Instrument File Standard document (Satlantic, 2011).

2.2.2.2 Meteorological Flags

The definition of meteorological flags followed the recommendations by Wernand (2002) to address unfavorable measurement circumstances such as low light, dusk and dawn, and precipitation. The author defined a precipitation flag based on the ratio (denoted as r) between Es (λ = 940 nm) and Es (λ = 370 nm) to infer the influence of Mie scattering by raindrops at 370 nm and absorption by H2O at 940 nm (Eismann, 2012). This part of the spectra is beyond the SAS-ST’s spectral range (350–798 nm); therefore, the precipitation flag uses 720 nm, which is also an absorption band of water vapor (Eismann, 2012), as also suggested by Wernand (2002). The low-light and dawn/dusk flags were also adjusted to the wavelength range of the SAS-ST. The meteorological flags were therefore specified as follows:

Flag 1, Es (λ = 480 nm) > 2 uW cm−2 nm−1: selecting significant Es (not low light).

Flag 2, Es (λ = 470 nm)/Es (λ = 680 nm) > 1: masking spectra acquired at dawn/dusk.

Flag 3, r = Es (λ = 720 nm)/Es (λ = 370 nm): value defined according to predefined threshold masking spectra affected by rainfall and high humidity.

The definition of Flag 3 took into consideration approximately 35,000 in situ Es spectra acquired with the SAS-ST system at different meteorological conditions between 12:50 and 14:30 LT from 18 June to 13 July 2016. All the measured in situ spectra were averaged every 1 min, resulting in about 1,400 averaged spectra. Humidity data at 1 min intervals were acquired with an RM Young Temperature RH probe installed on the ferry. Additionally, a camera was installed horizontally on top of the SAS-ST supporting frame, to acquire sky photos with a similar viewing geometry to the Es sensor. Weather conditions were determined based on the visual evaluation of 1,400 sky photos, which were organized into four classes: rainy, overcast, variable clouds (corresponding to 100%, 75%, and 50% cloudy conditions), and clear sky (corresponding to ≤25% cloudy and clear sky conditions).

To address Flag 3, Es and humidity data measured simultaneously were associated with the four weather classes. With this dataset, a discriminant analysis (Gao, 2005) was applied to r (N = 1,400) to determine the threshold value between two neighboring classes of weather conditions (denoted as u) according to

u=u1σ2+u2σ1σ1+σ2,(1)

where u and σ are the mean and the standard deviation of the two neighboring weather classes. The spectra were organized according to u into the weather condition classes. An accuracy assessment was conducted following a standard classification confusion matrix approach, which summarizes agreement and disagreement in the classified and in situ, with the matrix’s diagonal elements representing the counts correctly classified (Rosenfield and Fitzpatrick-Lins, 1984).

2.2.2.3 Deriving Rrs0+

Different approaches are available to derive Rrs0+, each with a certain level of complexity. For instance, Ruddick et al. (2006) suggested considering the spectral shape of the Rrs0+ for moderately to highly turbid waters. Simis and Olsson (2013) developed the “fingerprint method” to minimize the atmospheric gas absorption features in the reflectance spectrum by optimizing the sky radiance contribution to the water radiance signal. Gege (2014) and Groetsch et al. (2017) put forward a three-component reflectance model, which considers a spectrally resolved offset to correct for residual Sun and sky glint. This method generally performs best with local IOPs measurements, which cannot always be applied to the water conditions of our study area. Here, the remote sensing reflectance (denoted as RrsM99) was calculated following Mobley (1999) considering its good performance, simplicity, and the wide use by the community (e.g., Zibordi et al., 2009; Zibordi, 2016):

RrsM99(λ)=Lt(λ)ρsLi(λ)Es(λ),(2)

where the numerator represents the water-leaving radiance, Lw(λ), and ρs is the fraction of sky radiance (Li) that is measured by the sea viewing sensor (Lt) (Mobley, 1999). Variable illumination and surface roughness conditions make the determination of ρs a challenge (Mobley, 1999). The value of ρs is usually less than 5% of the acquired Li (Morel and Bricaud, 1981). However, the sky glint (ρsLi(λ)) can have a similar magnitude of Lw, and therefore, the choice of ρs significantly influences the accuracy of RrsM99 calculations (Mobley, 1999). The value of ρs was defined considering the local wind speed measured at Entrance Island (49.21 N, 123.81 W) and Halibut Bank (49.34 N, 123.72 W) (Figure 1A), available on the website of Environment and Climate Change Canada. Data from the ship anemometer were not used, due to challenges in correcting for the movement of the ferry.

2.2.2.4 Ship Superstructure Perturbation Correction

The ship superstructure influences the above-water radiometry by introducing a signal to the radiance field measured by the sea viewing sensor. Here, we considered that the ship wall was always under non-sunlit conditions, which minimizes any superstructure reflection onto the water. Furthermore, any data acquired at rotator angles lower than −50° (less than 14 m from the ship wall) are removed from further analysis due to possible measurements of shadowed waters. Hooker and Morel (2003) assumed that the reflection of a white ship’s superstructure onto the water (denoted Lship(λ)) has the same spectral composition as Es(λ) and that the infrared reflectance (e.g., 780 nm) from clear waters was negligible. Thus, the contribution of Lship(λ) to Lt(λ) can be written as

Lship(λ)=[Lt(780)ρsLi(780)]Es(780)Es(λ)=RrsM99(780)Es(λ).(3)

At any wavelength, the reflectance corrected for the sky and ship perturbation contributions, denoted RrsM99+ship(λ), was calculated as

RrsM99+ship(λ)=[Lt(λ)ρsLi(λ)Lship(λ)]Es(λ).(4)

Substituting for Lship(λ)  in Eq. 4, we have

RrsM99+ship(λ)=[Lt(λ)ρsLi(λ)]Es(λ)RrsM99(780),(5)

where RrsM99(780) is a constant reflectance at 780 nm and corresponds to the ship-contributed reflectance, Rrsship. To define this constant, Lt and the corresponding Li and Es measurements were chosen from the day with the lowest water reflectance, acquired under the lowest water turbidity conditions (turbidity data from the FerryBox system). For these conditions, we selected approximately 731 RrsM99 spectra from 06 July 2016 (Level 3A). The measured RrsM99(780) therefore corresponds to  Rrsship, and Eq. 5 can be re-written as

RrsM99+ship(λ)=[Lt(λ)ρsLi(λ)]Es(λ) Rrsship.(6)

2.2.2.5 BRDF Correction

To minimize the non-isotropic distribution of the water-leaving radiances in optically complex waters, a BRDF correction was applied following the inherent optical properties approach proposed by Lee et al. (2011). We developed a Python version of the code, adapted from the IDL version developed by Talone et al. (2018). The approach considers a two-step process: first, the quasi-analytical algorithm (QAA) method (Lee et al., 2002; Lee et al., 2011) is applied to RrsM99+ship(θ,φ) to retrieve the IOPs; second, the derived IOPs and accompanying G coefficients at nadir view are used to calculate RrsM99+ship(0,0). More specifically, with the input of seawater absorption, seawater backscattering (Lee et al., 2011), and RrsM99+ship(θ,φ), total absorption at a reference wavelength (λ0=  555 or 670 nm in QAA_V6) α(λ0) and particle scattering bbp(λ0) are calculated first. Particle scattering, bbp(λ), is then calculated by applying the power-law model on bbp(λ0) (λ0=  555 or 670 nm). Total absorption at all wavelengths, α(λ), is derived based on RrsM99+ship(θ,φ) and bbp(λ). The bidirectional effect corrected reflectance RrsM99+ship(0,0) is then calculated using the following equation:

RrsM99+ship(0, 0,θ0,λ)=[G0w(0, 0,θ0,λ)+G1w(0, 0,θ0,λ)bbw(λ)k(λ)]bbw(λ)k(λ)+[G0p(0, 0,θ0,λ)+G1p(0, 0,θ0,λ)bbp(λ)k(λ)]bbp(λ)k(λ),(7)

where k is the summation of α(λ), bbp(λ), and bbw(λ). G0w,  G1w,  G0p, and  G1p are model coefficients for water and particles and are dependent on angular geometry and phase function but independent of water IOPs (Lee et al., 2011).

2.2.2.6 Water Type Clustering and Data Quality Evaluation

Optical water type clustering methods can generally be grouped into two categories. The first category focuses on the spectral magnitude of Rrs, such as in Le et al. (2011), Moore et al. (2009, 2014), and Jackson et al. (2017). The second category considers the spectral shape of Rrs for optical water type clustering. For example, Wei et al. (2016) (hereafter referred to as W16) compared the target spectral shape to a database composed of various global waters, divided into 23 water types including clear blue oceanic waters (type 1) and yellowish sediment-laden waters (higher types). W16 has been proven effective in categorizing various water types and can also be used to evaluate the quality of independent above-water spectra (Barnes et al., 2019; Cui et al., 2020), and it is therefore also used in this research. As it focuses on the spectral shape of Rrs rather than its magnitude, this shape-based classification method minimizes the effect of Rrs magnitude on water type clustering. The subsequent quality assurance also follows the method developed by W16:

Step 1. After applying the corrections for sky glint, ship perturbation and BRDF effects on Rrs0+, the final reflectance is denoted Rrs, which was convoluted to the corresponding Sentinel-3A OLCI 11 bands from 400 to 709 nm using the Sentinel-3A OLCI Spectral Response Functions (SRFs) available from the European Space Agency, 2021. Sentinel-3A OLCI bands are considered in this study, since the products generated from this satellite are the main focus of a broader program on the coast of British Columbia (Giannini et al., 2021). However, the adopted approach can easily be extended to any satellite-derived Rrs0+. The seven selected OLCI spectral bands (412, 443, 490, 510, 560, 665, and 681 nm) are the closest to those adopted by W16.

Step 2. Each OLCI  Rrs spectrum was normalized to the root-sum-squares of Rrs  corresponding to all wavelengths of the spectrum:

nRrs(λ)=Rrs(λ)i=1nRrs(λi)22 ,(8)

where i = 1, … ,7 indicates each specific band. Each spectrum was assigned to one of W16’s water types by calculating the “spectral angle,” cos β, between the predefined reference spectrum, nRrs, and nRrs (Kruse et al., 1993):

cosβ=i=1n[nRrsnRrs]i=1n[nRrs(λi)]2i=1n[nRrs(λi)]2.(9)

Step 3. A quality score is computed as the ratio of the number of wavelengths in nRrs falling within the upper and lower bounds of nRrs given by the corresponding W16 water type. Five quality assurance (QA) scores are possible in this analysis (1.00, 0.86, 0.71, 0.57, or 0.43), corresponding to 7, 6, 5, 4, or 3 wavelengths of nRrs falling within the range of one of the W16 water types. Spectra with QA ≥ 0.71 were deemed to be of high quality and used for further analysis.

2.2.3 FerryBox Ancillary Data

Ancillary data were collected with a FerryBox system measuring salinity (PSU) with a SeaBird SBE45 thermosalinograph, Chl-a concentration (ug l−1) with a WET Labs ECO Triplet fluorometer, and CDOM fluorescence (ppb) and turbidity (NTU) with a WET Labs ECO Triplet BBFL2 scattering fluorescence sensor. Data processing details, including biofouling correction of the sensors and quenching correction for Chl-a measurements, are reported in Travers-Smith et al. (2021).

3 Results

3.1 Meteorological Flags

Flags 1 and 2 are defined in Section 2.2.2.2. The mean (u), standard deviation (σ), and calculated threshold (u) for r used to define meteorological Flag 3 (Eq. 1) for the four weather conditions are displayed in Table 2. Generally, rainy conditions are associated with the lowest mean value of r (0.86, +/- 0.05), and the defined range for this weather condition is r < 0.92. The value of u discriminating between overcast and variable cloudy conditions is 1.1, while clear sky conditions exhibited the highest average of r (1.29, +/- 0.04) and u = 1.26 is obtained between clear sky and variable clouds. Figure 3 illustrates the variability of r and the associated humidity measurements and photographs of the sky for 27 June 2016, which experienced different cloudy conditions. Note that, for cloudy conditions, r is mostly lower than 1.26, thus allowing for successful isolation of such measurements, as confirmed by the confusion matrix (Table 3). The matrix shows that clear sky conditions are correctly classified in about 98.5% of the measurements, which allows us to easily flag all other sky conditions (cloudy, overcast, rainy) unsuitable for analysis. However, it is important to note that the defined thresholds were ineffective in resolving variable cloud conditions, as about 32% were erroneously classified as clear sky conditions. Still, the r defined for clear sky conditions was implemented in PySciDON (Vandenberg et al., 2017) as part of our operational analysis of valid spectra, and all approved (not flagged) Es spectra were further inspected for possible cloudy conditions.

TABLE 2
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TABLE 2. Mean, standard deviation, and the r = Es (λ = 720 nm)/Es (λ = 370 nm) range between the four weather condition groups.

FIGURE 3
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FIGURE 3. Plot of humidity and r = Es (λ = 720 nm)/Es (λ = 370 nm) for 27 June 2016 which experienced different cloudy conditions. The sky images above correspond to sky conditions at a specific time. The duration of the specific sky condition is indicated by the black arrow lines.

TABLE 3
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TABLE 3. Classification confusion matrix of four groups of weather conditions.

3.2 Rrs0+ Calculation

SAS-ST data collected in the longitude range (123.936°W, 123.348°W) were divided into 49 bins (0.012° longitude step), each corresponding to ∼900 m on the ground, which approximates a 3 Sentinel-3A OLCI pixel window as used in Giannini et al. (2021). For the sky glint correction (RrsM99), these sites were split into groups corresponding to their proximity to two meteorological stations maintained by the Canadian government. Wind speed measurements were taken from Entrance Island (Environment and Climate Change Canada, 2021a) for longitudes between 123.936°W and 123.636°W (sites 1–25) and from Halibut Bank (Environment and Climate Change Canada, 2021b) for longitudes between 123.636°W and 123.348°W (sites 26–49). The measured wind speed ranged from 0.7 to 10.7 m/s with the corresponding ρs ranging from 0.0355 to 0.0480 (Mobley, 1999). The ρs correction typically resulted in a decrease in reflectance for clear waters with the lowest Rrs of 48% (blue bands) and 14% (green bands), while typical turbid waters decreased by 27% (blue bands) and 8% (green bands).

Sites 8 to 32 on 6 July 2016 provided data over the waters with the lowest turbidity (turbidity <2.0 NTU, i.e., <0.5 mg/L), and the RrsM99 from these cases was therefore used to evaluate the correction for the ship superstructure. The RrsM99 values of 0.00196 ± 10–4, 0.00202 ± 8.1*10–5, 0.00109 ± 5.7*10–5, and 0.00062 ± 4.2*10–5 sr−1 were found for 450, 550, 650, and 750 nm, respectively. As seen in Figure 4A, there was no indication of an increase in reflectance as the rotator angle approaches from its maximum to minimum values (from −22.5° to −46.7°, corresponding to a distance from the ship wall of 20.9 and 15.5 m, respectively). At distances below 14 m (α = −51.2°), a decrease in RrsM99( 780) was deemed indicative of interference from the ship shadow. Data corresponding to a rotator angle lower than −50° were therefore removed from further analysis. The measured RrsM99(780) corresponds to  Rrsship, and the histogram in Figure 4B shows a mean value of u =  0.000612 sr−1 and a corresponding standard deviation of σ = 0.000030 sr−1. Considering the mean value and a confidence level of 2σ, corresponding to 95% of the Level 3A RrsM99(780), the retrieved Rrsship was 0.00055 sr−1. This Rrsship value ensures longitude-binned Level 4 RrsM99+ship(λ)  in the infrared bands from clearest water close to zero and non-negative, and it may vary for a different ship superstructure environment (Hooker and Morel, 2003). The RrsM99+Ship value for the clearest water was on average decreased to 0.00141, 0.00147, 0.00054, and 0.00007 sr−1 for the 450, 550, 650, and 750 nm bands, respectively. The RrsShip correction factor consisted of about 13%, 7%, and 22% of the RrsM99 for the waters with higher turbidity from the Fraser River plume in the blue, green, and red regions of the spectrum, respectively, while it was negligible for spectra collected in coccolithophore bloom conditions.

FIGURE 4
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FIGURE 4. (A) Violin plot of L3a resolution RrsM99(780) (sr−1) (N = 725) and water surface footprint in relation to the ship wall distance for 06 July 2016. It is noted that, at a distance lower than 14.2 m (α = -51.2°), there is a decrease in RrsM99(780) which indicates the ship shadow influence observed when α < -50°. (B) Histogram of RrsM99(780) (sr-1)(N = 561) for the dataset after deleting 164 spectra influenced by ship shadow. The red dashed line indicates the value determined to represent superstructure-contributed reflectance (Rrsship = 0.00055 sr−1 for this research).

The IOPs-based BRDF correction was applied to generate the final reflectance, Rrs. The Rrs dataset was divided into two groups, since the optical properties vary considerably in the presence of a bloom: Group 1 (high and low turbidity waters with no coccolithophore bloom) corresponding to 11 days from 26 June to 14 August 2016 (N = 513 spectra) and Group 2 (coccolithophore bloom) corresponding to 5 days from 15 August to 25 August 2016 (N = 213 spectra). Figure 5 shows representative Rrs spectra for Group 1 and Group 2, and Section 2 in Supplementary Appendix A shows the summary plot of Rrs, together with the accompanying Es, Li, Lt for the sampled days. The results of the BRDF correction (Figure 6) show wavelength-dependent differences defined by the percentage difference  ε:

ε=(RrsRrsM99+ship 1)  100.(10)

FIGURE 5
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FIGURE 5. Representative Rrs (sr−1) with their median (solid lines) and first and third interquartile ranges (shaded areas) based on a ∼900 m range, showing typical lowest turbidity, typical plume, and coccolithophore bloom from 06 July 2016 to 22 August 2016.

FIGURE 6
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FIGURE 6. Joyplot for Groups 1 (non-coccolithophore bloom conditions) and 2 (coccolithophore bloom conditions) of BRDF correction percentage difference  ε for Sentinel-3A bands from 400 to 709 nm.

Noticeably, Rrs  is lower than RrsM99+ship by 5 to 10%, with more significant differences found at green wavelengths (Figure 6).

3.3 Quality Check and Optical Water Type Clustering

For Group 1 (N = 513), 92% of the nRrs  presented a QA score equal to or higher than 0.71 (Figures 7A,B), meaning that at least five out of seven specific wavelengths (412, 443, 490, 510, 560, 665, and 681 nm) of the individual nRrs spectrum are within the nRrs range for each water type cluster defined by W16. Also, 60% of the spectra have a score of 1.0; the majority of these spectra belong to water type 11, i.e., medium- and high-reflectance waters, as indicated in Figures 7C,D. About 8% (N = 41) of the spectra showed the lowest QA score of 0.57, and among these, 78% were found in water type 9. These waters exhibit the lowest reflectance in the dataset, corresponding to the clearest water types. We further investigated the possible source of the low QA scores and found that, for these 41 spectra, the nRrs  corresponding to bands centered at 490 and 510 nm fell out of the boundary defining the W16 water types (Figure 7E). For Group 2 (N = 231), 94% of the nRrs showed a QA score equal to or higher than 0.71 (Figures 8A,B). Figures 8A,B also show that 78% of the spectra are scored as 1.0. The majority belong to water type 11, with reflectance evenly distributed across the whole range, as indicated in Figures 8C,D. However, the method reported by W16 does not consider algal bloom conditions, and as such, it is not appropriate for evaluating all the spectra in Group 2. Nevertheless, the QA evaluation showed a higher percentage of high-quality scores than that for Group 1, likely due to the high reflectance signal measured during the coccolithophore bloom conditions. In these conditions, only about 7% (N = 15) of Rrs showed a QA score lower than 0.71, mainly from water type 11 (Figures 8A,B). Further analysis of these low QA score spectra showed that bands centered at 490 nm, 510 nm, and 560 nm were not included in any W16 water type (Figure 8E).

FIGURE 7
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FIGURE 7. Quality assurance results for Group 1. (A) Bar plot of the number of points at each water type and each quality score. (B) Frequency plot of each quality score. PDF represents the probability density function, and CDF represents the cumulative distribution function. (C) Histogram of Rrs (560) color-coded by quality scores. (D) Histogram of Rrs (560) color-coded by water types. (E) Number of points falling out of the range of each QA cluster in that wavelength for 41 points from Group 1 which has a score <0.71.

FIGURE 8
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FIGURE 8. Quality assurance results for Group 2. (A) Bar plot of the number of points at each water type and each quality score. (B) Frequency plot of each quality score. (C) Histogram of Rrs (560) color-coded by quality scores. (D) Histogram of Rrs (560) color-coded by water types. (E) Number of points falling out of the range of each QA cluster in that wavelength for 15 points from Group 2 which has a score <0.71.

For each group and water type, the Rrs varied in magnitude but presented a similar shape (Figures 9, 10). The nRrs from Group 1 is clustered into optical water types 8 to 15, excluding 13 (Figure 9B). The  Rrs in Group 1 ranged from 0.001 to 0.006 sr−1, 0.001 to 0.01 sr−1, and 0.0005 to 0.0035 sr−1 in the blue, green, and red bands, respectively (Figure 9A). Specifically, the highest Rrs (∼0.01 sr−1 at 560 nm) are observed within water types 10 and 11, which are generally associated with slightly higher turbid waters (Figure 11C); the lowest Rrs (<0.002 sr−1) are observed in many of the water types and are associated with low turbidity (<2.0 NTU; Figure 11C). For Group 2, dominated by coccolithophore bloom conditions, the nRrs are clustered into optical water types 8–14 (Figure 10B). For these waters, the lowest  Rrs at 560 nm (<0.01 sr−1) are associated with oceanic waters (salinity >26 PSU; Figure 12A), which in turn are characterized by lower turbidity (<3.0 NTU), higher Chl-a (>14.0 ug l−1), and lower CDOM (<2.0 ppb) (Figures 12B-D). The highest Rrs at 560 nm (0.03–0.04 sr−1) are for water types 11 and 12 (Figure 10A) and correspond to the highest turbidity (>5.0 NTU) and CDOM (>2.2 ppb) and lowest Chl-a (<3.0 ug l−1).

FIGURE 9
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FIGURE 9. Plots of SAS-ST reflectance Rrs (sr−1) (A) and normalized reflectance  nRrs (B) for 513 points from Group 1. Radiometry measurements are clustered into optical water types 8 to 15, excluding 13. A colored line in each water type indicates the median of the cluster.

FIGURE 10
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FIGURE 10. Plots of SAS-ST reflectance Rrs (sr−1) (A) and normalized reflectance nRrs (B) for 231 points from Group 2. Radiometry measurements are clustered into optical water types 8 to 14. A colored line in each water type indicates the median of the cluster.

FIGURE 11
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FIGURE 11. Reflectance Rrs (sr−1) from Group 1, which is color-coded in the corresponding (A) salinity (PSU), (B) CDOM fluorescence (ppb), (C) turbidity (NTU), and (D) chlorophyll (ug/l) values.

FIGURE 12
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FIGURE 12. Reflectance Rrs (sr−1) from Group 2, which is color-coded in the corresponding (A) salinity (PSU), (B) CDOM fluorescence (ppb), (C) turbidity (NTU), and (D) chlorophyll (ug/l) values.

4 Discussion

Our results show that optimizing the geometry of data acquisition, filtering data acquired under unstable illumination conditions (e.g., dawn/dusk, cloudy, and rainy), and correcting for skylight radiance, ship superstructure, and BRDF effects, allowed for Rrs0+ data retrieval with high quality when compared with the W16 quality assurance dataset.

The first consideration for optimal data quality is the geometry of data acquisition (Mobley, 1999; Hooker and Morel, 2003; Zibordi et al., 2006; Simis and Olsson, 2013; Garaba et al., 2015; Brando et al., 2016; Vansteenwegen et al., 2019; Tilstone et al., 2020). Here, with optimal configuration, the spectral measurements were acquired on the non-sunlit side of the ferry to minimize the reflected ferry signal on the above-water radiance measurements (Hooker and Morel, 2003), and at an adapted sensor viewing zenith angle to avoid ship superstructure shadows and an optimal sensor-Sun azimuth angle to minimize the skylight radiance signal on the above-water radiance measurements (Mobley, 1999). Various skylight radiance correction approaches are available (e.g., Mobley, 1999; Ruddick et al., 2006; Lee et al., 2010; Groetsch et al., 2017) requiring different complexity of input data to successfully correct for skylight radiance. For instance, the method suggested by Gege (2014) and Groetsch et al. (2017) applies a three-component model, in which using optimized local IOPs, to correct for the residual Sun and sky glint signal on the above-water measurement. We tested (analysis not shown here) this approach with a small set of IOPs measurements collected concomitant to some of the SAS-ST data, and the results were similar to those obtained with the method by Mobley (1999). Although Mobley’s method is commonly used, the ρs factor is not wavelength-dependent, resulting in higher uncertainties for longer wavelengths (Lee et al., 2010). Still, for similar geometry and environmental conditions (wind speed <13.0 m/s and clear skies), Garaba and Zielinski (2013) showed that Mobley’s method performed similarly to three other approaches, with the advantage of ensuring non-negative Rrs0+ retrievals in the near-infrared. Also, uncertainties in the wind speed impact the ρs factor, especially in the blue bands (Mobley, 1999).

The ship-specific superstructure correction factor Rrsship was determined as 0.00055 sr−1. Although this factor is not commonly addressed in above-water radiometry measurements (e.g., Simis and Olsson, 2013; Brando et al., 2016), it can cause significant uncertainties in the final Rrs0+. Talone and Zibordi (2019) have shown that the structure signal (in this case, a fixed tower covered with a white sheet) was relatively more pronounced in the near-infrared than at visible wavelengths and decreased with the inverse square of the distance between the platform and the sensor footprint. For a similar distance as in our study (15–21 m), Talone and Zibordi (2019) estimated a tower perturbation factor of about 10–3% for the 750–800 nm range, resulting in Rrsship = 0.00002 sr−1 at 780 nm. This value is one order of magnitude lower than the value determined for the QoOB, likely because of the larger structure of the QoOB (19 m in height and 139 m in length) compared with the experimental tower used by the authors (15 m in height and ∼10 m in length). For a smaller ferry, the Queen of Alberni, using the same SAS-ST and ship perturbation approach adopted here, Giannini et al. (2021) defined Rrsship = 0.00005 sr−1, a value similar to the one in Talone and Zibordi (2019).

A correct evaluation of the dependence of the measured signal on the viewing geometry and the bidirectional effects (Morel and Gentili, 1996; Morel et al., 2002; Zibordi et al., 2009; Lee et al., 2011) is important for validating satellite-based retrieved reflectance or water radiance (Zibordi et al., 2009; Talone et al., 2018) and comparing above-water radiometric data acquired under different geometric conditions (Wei et al., 2016). Here, a BRDF correction was required because the data quality was evaluated against the W16 global Rrs0+ database, composed of reflectance measurements acquired with a nadir viewing geometry. The BRDF correction was found to decrease Rrs0+ in this research by ∼5–10%, as also found by Talone et al. (2018).

The final evaluation of Rrs0+ is preferentially performed against in situ measurements of below-water Rrs and/or measurements collected with various instruments at the same location (e.g., Hooker et al., 2002; Lee et al., 2010; Zibordi, 2016; Tilstone et al., 2020). However, collecting below-water Rrs is not possible with our measurement setup. Instead, our Rrs  dataset was evaluated against a global water dataset. This evaluation was conducted considering two different clusters of data: Group 1 representing clear and turbid waters and Group 2 representing coccolithophore bloom conditions (Ianson et al., 2018). Group 1 exhibited values of Rrs well within the ranges of those measured by Komick et al. (2009), Phillips and Costa (2017), Carswell et al. (2017), and Giannini et al. (2021) in the same region. Group 1 consisted of a diverse group of waters, as indicated by the large salinity range (12–27 PSU; Figure 11A) corresponding to Fraser River plume to oceanic waters (Loos and Costa, 2010; Travers-Smith et al., 2021). In these waters, the bio-optical constitutes were generally characterized by a large range of CDOM fluorescence (0.05–6 ppb) and turbidity (1–5 NTU) (Figures 11B-D). Higher Rrs  values are associated with the lower salinity of the Fraser River plume and estuarine waters (Loos and Costa, 2010; Phillips and Costa, 2017; Travers-Smith et al., 2021). For Group 2, the Rrs spectra were well within the ranges observed by Moore et al. (2012), Neukermans and Fournier (2018), and Cazzaniga et al. (2021) for waters under coccolithophore bloom conditions. Specifically, Cazzaniga et al. (2021) have shown high values (Rrs(550) 0.03 sr−1) for the peak of a coccolithophore bloom, intermediate values (Rrs(550) 0.02 sr−1) for receding bloom conditions, and low values (Rrs(550) <0.01 sr−1) for the start and the end of bloom. Similarly, our spectra showed Rrs(560) >Rrs(500) likely representing the start of the bloom (water types 11 and 12; Figure 10). Other spectra showed an increase at Rrs(500) (water types 8, 9, and 10), probably associated with a high concentration of detached coccoliths indicative of receding bloom conditions (Neukermans and Fournier, 2018; Cazzaniga et al., 2021).

The evaluation of Rrs data showed an overall high quality, with about 92% of Group 1 and 94% of Group 2 with a QA score>=0.71. A QA score <0.71 was only observed for 8% (N = 41) of Group 1 and corresponded to the lowest Rrs for which the out-of-range wavelengths were 490 and 510 nm. This was not expected, since uncertainties of Rrs retrievals are mostly associated with shorter wavelengths (Mobley 1999; Hlaing et al., 2013; Wei et al., 2020). However, the W16 method relies on normalizing Rrs at each wavelength with respect to the integral over all Rrs (Eq. 8). Erroneous values of Rrs  at 412 and 443 nm can therefore influence the shape of the corresponding nRrs and, consequently, the water type to which it belongs.

Although our protocols for Rrs0+ measurements with the SAS-ST followed rigorous criteria for data acquisition and processing, there is still a level of data variability and uncertainty that it is difficult to account for (Ruddick et al., 2019; Vabson et al., 2019; Tilstone et al., 2020; Alikas et al., 2020). These uncertainties may also explain the 8% of acquired spectra with lower quality (QA <0.71). Recent evaluations of international field-based radiometers (Tilstone et al., 2020), including similar Satlantic HyperOCR radiometers as those used here, indicated that the inaccuracies in downwelling-irradiance measurements resulted in the largest Rrs  variability, especially for the blue (3.5%) and red (3.0%) wavelengths. The Es spectra collected for this research at around solar noon (see Section 2 in Supplementary Appendix A) exhibited very low variability in clear sky conditions; thus, we do not expect the same level of uncertainties reported in Tilstone et al. (2020). The quantification of specific uncertainties in Rrs measurements is challenging, especially considering the lack of simultaneous, below-water reflectance measurements. Our Rrs data showed high quality and have been effectively used for the evaluation of atmospheric correction procedures for Sentinel-3A OLCI (Giannini et al., 2021). To provide vicarious calibration for satellites, an uncertainty budget of the FRM is a requirement, which should be further investigated by accounting for the environmental conditions during data acquisition, such as in Alikas et al. (2020).

5 Conclusion

Validation of ocean color satellite Rrs retrievals requires a large number of high-quality Rrs0+ matchups (Müller et al., 2015; Werdell et al., 2018; Valente et al., 2019). However, the availability of such matchups is often limited due to the difficulty of acquiring high-quality data over large spatial and temporal domains (Tilstone et al., 2020). These constraints are reported for many study regions (e.g., Valente et al., 2019; Tilstone et al., 2020, Giannini et al., 2021), and it is specifically an issue along the west coast of Canada (Komick et al., 2009; Carswell et al., 2017; Hilborn and Costa, 2018; Giannini et al., 2021). Autonomous radiometers mounted on fixed towers, such as AERONET-OC (Zibordi et al., 2006, 2009) and the newest WATERHYPERNET hyperspectral network (Vansteenwegen et al., 2019; Vanhellemont and Ruddick, 2021), can also provide a large number of high-quality matchups. Another option is to utilize mobile platforms such as ships. We presented the protocols to deploy the SAS-ST instrument on a commercial ferry, together with the evaluation of the large volume of high-quality Rrs data acquired along the coastal waters of BC, Canada. The summary of our results and recommendations is as follows:

1. The application of meteorological flags in PySciDON successfully identified 98.5% of the spectra as acquired under clear sky conditions. The remaining 1.5% of Es spectra were manually inspected.

2. The ship-specific superstructure perturbation signal amounted to Rrsship = 0.00055 sr−1. This value is about 25% of the Rrs0+ signal in blue and green bands for relatively clear waters and about ∼10% in the same bands for waters with higher reflectance (Supplementary Appendix A, Section 2). Therefore, an accurate estimate of Rrsship is critical to successfully retrieve the reflectance in blue and green bands, especially for low-reflectance waters.

3. The correction for the BRDF effects lowers Rrs0+ by ∼5–10%, allowing for proper comparison among Rrs0+ measurements from the literature and matchups used to validate satellite retrievals.

4. Quality evaluation showed overall high scores: ∼92% of Group 1 and 94% of Group 2 are associated with a score>=0.71, implying that the data can be used for validation of atmospheric corrected satellite-retrieved Rrs.

The methodology presented here is adaptable to other ships, to enable surveys of different water types and complement fixed platforms such as AERONET-OC (Zibordi et al., 2009) and WATERHYPERNET (Vanhellemont and Ruddick 2021). Further work will focus on providing the error budget based on estimates of the uncertainty contribution from the sensor’s calibration, data processing, and environmental variability, essential for FRMs (Zibordi et al., 2015b; Vabson et al., 2019; Tilstone et al., 2020; Alikas et al., 2020).

Data Availability Statement

The original contributions presented in the study are included in the article/Supplementary Materials, further inquiries can be directed to the corresponding author.

Author Contributions

The PhD candidate ZW was responsible for data collection and analysis and manuscript writing. MC was responsible for project conceptualization, results, discussions, and significant reviews in the manuscript.

Funding

ZW was supported by a Pacific Salmon Foundation/MITACS Fellowship. Fieldwork support through Ocean Networks Canada. MC was supported through funds from the NSERC NCE MEOPAR (Marine Environmental Observation, Prediction and Response Network), the Canadian Space Agency (FAST 18FAVICB09), the Canada Foundation for Innovation (CFI), and the NSERC Discovery Grant, Canada.

Conflict of Interest

The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.

Publisher’s Note

All claims expressed in this article are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily represent those of their affiliated organizations, or those of the publisher, the editors, and the reviewers. Any product that may be evaluated in this article, or claim that may be made by its manufacturer, is not guaranteed or endorsed by the publisher.

Acknowledgments

We are thankful to the BC Ferries crew for logistical support during the installation of sensors and Ocean Networks Canada for technical support with the installation and maintenance of sensors.

Supplementary Material

The Supplementary Material for this article can be found online at: https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/frsen.2022.867570/full#supplementary-material

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Keywords: SAS Solar Tracker, ship superstructure perturbation correction, BRDF correction, data quality evaluation, reflectance

Citation: Wang Z and Costa M (2022) Autonomous Shipborne In Situ Reflectance Data in Optically Complex Coastal Waters: A Case Study of the Salish Sea, Canada. Front. Remote Sens. 3:867570. doi: 10.3389/frsen.2022.867570

Received: 01 February 2022; Accepted: 19 April 2022;
Published: 30 June 2022.

Edited by:

Lian Feng, Southern University of Science and Technology, China

Reviewed by:

Peter Gege, German Aerospace Center (DLR), Germany
Matteo Ottaviani, National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), United States

Copyright © 2022 Wang and Costa. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

*Correspondence: Ziwei Wang, ziweiwang@uvic.ca

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