Quantifying Night Sky Brightness as a Stressor for Coastal Ecosystems in Moreton Bay, Queensland

Noam Levin*, Rachel Madeleine Cooper, Salit Kark

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Growing light pollution is increasingly studied in terrestrial environments. However, research on night lights in coastal ecosystems is limited. We aimed to complement spaceborne remote sensing with ground-based hemispheric photos to quantify the exposure of coastal habitats to light pollution. We used a calibrated DSLR Canon camera with a fisheye lens to photograph the night sky in 24 sites in the rapidly developing area of Moreton Bay, Queensland, Australia, extracting multiple brightness metrics. We then examined the use of the LANcubeV2 photometer and night-time satellite data from SDGSAT-1 for coastal areas. We found that the skies were darker in less urbanized areas and on islands compared with the mainland. Sky brightness near the zenith was correlated with satellite observations only at a coarse spatial scale. When examining light pollution horizontally above the horizon (60–80° degrees below the zenith), we found that the seaward direction was brighter than the landward direction in most sites due to urban glow on the seaward side. These findings emphasize the importance of ground measurements of light pollution alongside satellite imagery. In order to reduce the exposure of coastal ecosystems to light pollution, actions need to go beyond sites with conservation importance and extend to adjacent urban areas.

Original languageEnglish
Article number3828
JournalRemote Sensing
Volume16
Issue number20
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 2024

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 by the authors.

Keywords

  • coastal
  • DSLR camera
  • islands
  • LANcube
  • light pollution
  • Moreton Bay
  • SDGSAT-1
  • sky brightness

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