Assessment of actual evapotranspiration over a semi-arid heterogeneous land surface by means of coupled low resolution remote sensing data with energy balance model: comparison to extra Large Aperture Scintillometer measurements.

Autor: Saadi, Sameh, Boulet, Gilles, Bahir, Malik, Brut, Aurore, Mougenot, Bernard, Fanise, Pascal, Simonneaux, Vincent, Chabaane, Zohra Lili
Zdroj: Hydrology & Earth System Sciences Discussions; 2017, p1-31, 31p
Abstrakt: In semi-arid areas, agricultural production is restricted by water availability; hence efficient agricultural water management is a major issue. The design of tools providing regional estimates of evapotranspiration (ET), one of the most relevant water balance fluxes, may help the sustainable management of water resources. Remote sensing provides periodic data about actual vegetation temporal dynamics (through the Normalized Difference Vegetation Index NDVI) and water availability under water stress (through the land surface temperature LST) which are crucial factors controlling ET. In this study, spatially distributed estimates of ET (or its energy equivalent, the latent heat fluxes LE) in the Kairouan plain (Central Tunisia) were computed by applying the Soil Plant Atmosphere and Remote Sensing Evapotraspiration (SPARSE) model fed by low resolution remote sensing data (Terra and Aqua MODIS). The work goal was to assess the operational use of the SPARSE model and the accuracy of the modelled i) sensible heat flux (H) and ii) daily ET over a heterogeneous semi-arid landscape with a complex land cover (i.e. trees, winter cereals, summer vegetables). The SPARSE's layer approach was run to compute instantaneous estimates of H and LE fluxes at the satellite overpass time. The good correspondence (R2 = 0.60 and 0.63 and RMSE = 57.89 W/m-2 and 53.85 W/m-2; for Terra and Aqua, respectively) between instantaneous H estimates and large aperture scintillometer (XLAS)'s H measurements along a pathlength of 4 km over the study area showed that the SPARSE model presents satisfactory accuracy. Results showed that, despite the fairly large scatter, the instantaneous LE can be suitably estimated at large scale (RMSE = 47.20 W/m-2 and 43.20 W/m-2; for Terra and Aqua, respectively and R2 = 0.55 for both satellites). Additionally, water stress was investigated by comparing modelled (SPARSE derived) to observed (XLAS derived) water stress values; we found that most points were located within a 0.2 confidence interval, thus the general tendencies are well reproduced. Even though extrapolation of instantaneous latent heat flux values to daily totals was less obvious, daily ET estimates are deemed acceptable. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index