COVID-19 lockdown measures reveal human impact on water transparency in the Venice Lagoon

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.139612Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Lockdown measures in Venice restricted the mobility and stopped water traffic, with a consequent decrease of wake waves.

  • An unprecedented water transparency in the city canals was determined by the reduction of boat traffic and tourism.

  • Turbidity remained at usual levels in sustained wind conditions.

  • Essential activities like fisheries and commercial shipping continued through the lockdown thus revealing their impact.

Abstract

The lagoon of Venice has always been affected by the regional geomorphological evolution, anthropogenic stressors and global changes. Different morphological settings and variable biogeophysical conditions characterize this continuously evolving system that rapidly responds to the anthropic impacts. When the lockdown measures were enforced in Italy to control the spread of the SARS-CoV-2 infection on March 10th 2020, the ordinary urban water traffic around Venice, one of the major pressures in the lagoon, came to a halt. This provided a unique opportunity to analyse the environmental effects of restrictions to mobility on water transparency. Pseudo true-colour composites Sentinel-2 satellite imagery proved useful for qualitative visual interpretation, showing the reduction of the vessel traffic and their wakes from the periods before and during the SARS-CoV-2 outbreak. A quantitative analysis of suspended matter patterns, based on satellite-derived turbidity, in the absence of traffic perturbations, allowed to focus on natural processes and the residual stress from human activities that continued throughout the lockdown. We conclude that the high water transparency can be considered as a transient condition determined by a combination of natural seasonal factors and the effects of COVID-19 restrictions.

Keywords

Water transparency
Suspended sediments
Sentinel-2
Vessel traffic
Satellite imagery

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