Under Hakai’s Cryosphere Axis (led by Bill Floyd and Brian Menounos) and in conjunction with Vancouver Island University research partners (BC Govt., BC Hydro, Metro Vancouver, Comox Valley Regional District and Nanaimo Regional District and Global Water Futures) our work continues to develop a next-generation snow observation system that can be used to quantify the volume of seasonal snow and its importance for surface flows in coastal watersheds. We continue to use and integrate satellite, drone, and airborne laser altimetry surveys to map snow depth in coastal watersheds where coordinated Hakai research is being undertaken.
Repeat ACO surveys over selected areas of interest will be used in conjunction with more frequent RPAS-based surveys, field measurements of snow density, and distributed surface energy models to yield spatio-temporal observations of SWE and how it varies in time and space.
The Airborne Coastal Observatory (ACO) is an aerial remote sensing platform operated by Hakai Institute, with support from partners UNBC and Kisik Aerial Survey. The platform is primarily focused on monitoring Ice and Snow as a part of Hakai’s Cryosphere program, but the platform works on a range of applications.