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National Committee on Marine Sciences (NCMS)

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  • Quantifying vertical land motion at tide gauge sites using permanent scatterer interferometric synthetic aperture radar and global navigation satellite system solutions
    Reyes, Rosalie; Bauzon, Ma. Divina Angela; Pasaje, Nikki Alen; Alfante, Rey Mark; De Lara, Pocholo Miguel; Ordillano, Marion; Flores, Paul Caesar; Rediang, Abegail; Nota, Patrick Anthony; Siringan, Fernando; Blanco, Ariel; Bringas, Dennis (Springer, 2022-01-29)
    One of the consequences of climate change is sea level rise (SLR). Near the coast SLR varies at different locations due to the contributions from regional/local climatic and non-climatic factors. Vertical land motion (VLM) can affect the accuracy of sea level observations from tide gauges (TG) that may exacerbate coastal area inundation/flooding. This study investigated the viability of Permanent Scatterer Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (PSInSAR) to quantify the rate of VLM at the TG sites. Measurements from TG co-located GNSS receivers provide the actual VLM rates and ground truth for PSInSAR-derived rates. Based on the results from the 9 study sites, almost all except one are subsiding. Both PSInSAR and GNSS solutions showed the same trend with rates that correlate at 0.89. Analysis from 20 Active GNSS stations showed 95% of the sites are undergoing land subsidence. This should be a cause of concern for communities near the coastal areas.
  • Local tide and geoid corrections significantly improve coastal retracked Jason sea surface heights in the Philippines
    Flores, Paul Caesar; Reyes, Rosalie; Amedo-Repollo, Charina Lyn; Rediang, Abegail; Alfante, Rey Mark; Bauzon, Ma. Divina Angela; Pasaje, Nikki; Bringas, Dennis (Science and Technology Information Institute, 2022-11-08)
    Retracking algorithms increase the accuracy of coastal sea surface height (SSH) measurements. However, it is still important to validate these retracking estimates with tide gauge (SSHtg) observations. We downloaded the freely available Jason altimeter SSH processed using the XTRACK-ALES algorithm, then detided the SSH using different tide models. The first model is the default tidal correction based on Finite Element Solution 2014 (SSHfes), and the second model is the T_Tide harmonic analysis of the nearest tide gauge (SSHaltimeter). SSHfes showed a very poor correlation (< 0.31) and very high root mean square error (RMSE, > 29 cm). In contrast, SSHaltimeter generally showed a very high correlation (> 0.91) and low RMSE (< 17.4 cm). A further quality check based on the average and standard deviation of the difference between the SSH readings (SSHfes – SSHtg and SSHaltimeter – SSHtg) also showed the superior performance of SSHaltimeter,which scored < 9.3 and < 16.5 cm, respectively; compared to SSHfes, which scored < 9.3 cm and > 27 cm for the same parameters. The poor performance from the SSHfes likely comes from the complex bathymetry and coastal geomorphology of the country, which is not accounted for in the FES. The Philippines generally has a narrow shelf, and the FES tide corrections may be related to deep-water tides rather than the shallow-water tides observed from tide gauges. Despite the high correlation and agreement between the SSHaltimeter and SSHtg, the rate of sea level rise from the SSHaltimeter in some sites is more than twice the rate from SSHtg, which indicates the possible influence of the vertical land movement.
    This study was supported by grants to R.B. Reyes by the Department of Science and Technology–Philippine Council for Industry, Energy, and Emerging Technology Research and Development through the Coastal Sea Level Rise Philippines Project. We also thank the anonymous reviewers for their feedback on how to improve the manuscript.