Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

Papa Fabrice, Cretaux J. F., Grippa M., Robert E., Trigg M., Tshimanga R. M., Kitambo B., Paris A., Carr A., Fleischmann A. S., De Fleury M., Gbetkom P. G., Calmettes B., Calmant Stéphane. (2022). Water resources in Africa under global change : monitoring surface waters from space [+ Correction publ. 13 juillet 2022, 2 p.]. Surveys in Geophysics, [Early access], [52 p.+ correction publ. 13 juillet 2022, 2 p.]. ISSN 0169-3298.

Titre du document
Water resources in Africa under global change : monitoring surface waters from space [+ Correction publ. 13 juillet 2022, 2 p.]
Année de publication
2022
Type de document
Article référencé dans le Web of Science WOS:000784072100001
Auteurs
Papa Fabrice, Cretaux J. F., Grippa M., Robert E., Trigg M., Tshimanga R. M., Kitambo B., Paris A., Carr A., Fleischmann A. S., De Fleury M., Gbetkom P. G., Calmettes B., Calmant Stéphane
Source
Surveys in Geophysics, 2022, [Early access], [52 p.+ correction publ. 13 juillet 2022, 2 p.] ISSN 0169-3298
The African continent hosts some of the largest freshwater systems worldwide, characterized by a large distribution and variability of surface waters that play a key role in the water, energy and carbon cycles and are of major importance to the global climate and water resources. Freshwater availability in Africa has now become of major concern under the combined effect of climate change, environmental alterations and anthropogenic pressure. However, the hydrology of the African river basins remains one of the least studied worldwide and a better monitoring and understanding of the hydrological processes across the continent become fundamental. Earth Observation, that offers a cost-effective means for monitoring the terrestrial water cycle, plays a major role in supporting surface hydrology investigations. Remote sensing advances are therefore a game changer to develop comprehensive observing systems to monitor Africa's land water and manage its water resources. Here, we review the achievements of more than three decades of advances using remote sensing to study surface waters in Africa, highlighting the current benefits and difficulties. We show how the availability of a large number of sensors and observations, coupled with models, offers new possibilities to monitor a continent with scarce gauged stations. In the context of upcoming satellite missions dedicated to surface hydrology, such as the Surface Water and Ocean Topography (SWOT), we discuss future opportunities and how the use of remote sensing could benefit scientific and societal applications, such as water resource management, flood risk prevention and environment monitoring under current global change.
Plan de classement
Sciences fondamentales / Techniques d'analyse et de recherche [020] ; Sciences du milieu [021] ; Hydrologie [062] ; Télédétection [126]
Description Géographique
AFRIQUE
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F B010084700]
Identifiant IRD
fdi:010084700
Contact