Surface Water Evolution (2001–2017) at the Cambodia/Vietnam Border in the Upper Mekong Delta Using Satellite MODIS Observations
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Tools and Preliminary Analysis
2.1. Study Domain
- Zone 1C: This zone is located in the Takeo province of Cambodia and has been delineated to correspond to a sub-region where large scale investment in drainage canals have been conducted in the late 1990s/early 2000s—with further dredging being done in the mid 2010s. The area is composed of two sub-units. First, a protected wetland (preservation area since 2007) in the center–east of the zone. Second, a vast expanse of agricultural land where farmers engage in double rice cultivation with the first season spanning December-March, when the flood recedes, and the second season in May-July, before the flood arrives.
- Zone 2C: This zone is located in the Kandal province of Cambodia. It is limited by the Bassac River (Hau River in Vietnam) to the west, the Mekong River (Tien River in Vietnam) to the east and lies south of a vast expanse of natural vegetation. A network of drainage canals and shallow reservoirs excavated during the Khmer rouge regime (late 1970s) supports one season of rice cultivation between December and March, in the central part of the zone. Closest to the river bank, vegetables and fruit trees can be cultivated (see Figure 2F). The rehabilitation of transversal canals (called Preks), drawing water from the Bassac and the Mekong, allows for an intensification of agriculture and a progressive shift to two rice cultivation seasons while capture fisheries are still an important activity when the flood recedes (November-February).
- Zone 3C: This zone is located in the Prey Veng province of Cambodia. It is slightly more elevated than the two preceding Cambodian zones and faces drought conditions during the hot months of the year (March–May), see Figure 2D). For the most part, farmers engage in a single season of rice cultivation when the flood recedes (December-March), with occasional areas where double rice cultivation can be found, supported by groundwater extraction (wells, see Figure 2B) or collective pumping systems that supply surface water from a dense network of earth canals to fields in May-June before the flood comes.
- Zone 1V: This zone constitutes part of the Long Xuyen Quadrangle, the area of the Vietnamese Mekong Delta that has witnessed the most extensive development of high dykes over the last two decades. More specifically, it spreads over the district of Chau Doc and Chau Phu of the An Giang province. Most of the area is protected by high dykes, most of which have been built from 2008 onwards, allowing farmers to engage in triple rice cultivation.
- Zone 2V: This zone forms an “island” in the middle of the Upper Delta; it is located between the Hau River (Bassac in Cambodia) to the west and the Tien River (Mekong in Cambodia) to the east. It spreads over three districts (i.e., An Phu, Tan Chau and Phu Tan) of the An Giang province. The Phu Tan district, where the North Vam Nao Water Control project was implemented during the 2000s, is the only area of the Vietnamese Mekong Delta where the policy to enforce a 3-3-2 crop cycle has been adhered to Reference [27] (The “3-3-2 crop cycle” is a term indicating that farmers engage in three crop cycles for 2 years in a row and for only 2 crop cycles the third year. During that third year, water “is allowed” to enter the fields through control flooding to flush field and bring fertile sediments. Compartments are flooded on a rotational basis. The advantages and drawbacks of this policy have been strongly debated, see for instance Reference [27,28]). This is made possible because the “island” is surrounded by a high “ring dyke” and sluice gates are operated by a dedicated office according to a strict schedule, see Figure 2H.
- Zone 3V: This zone constitutes part of what is commonly known as the “plain of reeds”. Located in Dong Thap province, the plain of reeds is one of the last areas of the Mekong Delta to have been reclaimed for agricultural purposes due to sociopolitical and ecological challenges [29]. Most of the zone is protected by low-dykes built in the 1990s (also called August dykes because they allow delaying the flood to harvest the summer-autumn crop) and farmers generally engage in double rice cultivation.
2.2. Long-Term Retrieval Using MODIS Instrument
2.3. Preliminary Analysis of the MODIS Database
3. Spatio-Temporal Analysis of the Long-Term Variability of Surface Waters
3.1. Principal Component Analysis
3.1.1. PCA Methodology
3.1.2. PCA Results
3.2. Long-Term Evolution of the Spatial Distribution of Surface Waters
3.3. Long-Term Evolution of the Seasonality
- For instance, the dynamics in Zone 1C have not changed much except that water pixels are delayed by a few weeks. The mixed pixels peak are less pronounced in 2012–2016 than in 2001–2005 but still mimic the two cropping season in the area (with land preparation occurring in May and December, respectively, see Figure 2E). The water pixels season length seems to be shorter with a later start and a shorter duration, and amplitude is slightly lower (Figure 2E) shows the flooded landscape of the area in September 2018).
- Zone 2C has also witnessed little change: the mixed and water pixels have a peak that is delayed by a few weeks, and the two peaks of the mixed pixels are less pronounced, as if the onset of the flood is more progressive while the recession of the flood is more rapid.
- Zone 3C has trends more difficult to analyse due to the heterogeneity of the large area (6267 pixels). The water pixel area has dropped significantly (by 20% in the season maximum) and the mixed pixel peak seems to occur earlier but to be less pronounced.
- Zone 1V shows a decrease in the number of water pixels by about 70%. Over one year, the total number of mixed pixels has not changed much but a first pick in the season in April has appeared. This peak marks the preparation of rice fields through flooding by the use of pumps.
- In Zone 2V, again, the water pixels area has considerably decreased, by about 50%. A peak of mixed pixels occurs around mid of April in the period 2012–2016 and did not exist in 2001–2005 as observed in Zone 1V. The mixed pixels temporal behaviour remains similar in the main flood season, but the observed peaks are delayed.
- Zone 3V has a lower decrease in the number of water pixels than the two other Vietnamese zones but it remains very significant (by more than 20%). The mixed pixels have a similar area, but the peaks are less noticeable in 2012–2016 than in 2001–2005 as was the case in Zone 3C.
3.4. Interpretation/Discussion
4. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Zone Id | Name | Nb Pixels | Characteristics |
---|---|---|---|
CAMBODIA | 9972 | ||
1C | Takeo | 2283 | Large scale drainage network/Pumping/Double crop |
2C | Kandal | 1422 | Former Pol Pot irrigation system/Single crop |
3C | Prey Veng | 6267 | Single rice crop/Little water control/Heterogeneous |
VIETNAM | 11,646 | ||
1V | Long Xuyen Quadrangle | 1787 | Majority of high dykes |
2V | Vam Nao Water Control project | 2727 | Full water control (dykes and sluice gates) |
3V | Plain of Reeds | 7132 | Majority of low dykes |
TOTAL | 21,618 |
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Aires, F.; Venot, J.-P.; Massuel, S.; Gratiot, N.; Pham-Duc, B.; Prigent, C. Surface Water Evolution (2001–2017) at the Cambodia/Vietnam Border in the Upper Mekong Delta Using Satellite MODIS Observations. Remote Sens. 2020, 12, 800. https://doi.org/10.3390/rs12050800
Aires F, Venot J-P, Massuel S, Gratiot N, Pham-Duc B, Prigent C. Surface Water Evolution (2001–2017) at the Cambodia/Vietnam Border in the Upper Mekong Delta Using Satellite MODIS Observations. Remote Sensing. 2020; 12(5):800. https://doi.org/10.3390/rs12050800
Chicago/Turabian StyleAires, Filipe, Jean-Philippe Venot, Sylvain Massuel, Nicolas Gratiot, Binh Pham-Duc, and Catherine Prigent. 2020. "Surface Water Evolution (2001–2017) at the Cambodia/Vietnam Border in the Upper Mekong Delta Using Satellite MODIS Observations" Remote Sensing 12, no. 5: 800. https://doi.org/10.3390/rs12050800
APA StyleAires, F., Venot, J. -P., Massuel, S., Gratiot, N., Pham-Duc, B., & Prigent, C. (2020). Surface Water Evolution (2001–2017) at the Cambodia/Vietnam Border in the Upper Mekong Delta Using Satellite MODIS Observations. Remote Sensing, 12(5), 800. https://doi.org/10.3390/rs12050800