Cheng Huang, Long Zhao, Yingying Chen, Jinyan Chen, Kun Yang
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Soil moisture plays a key role in regulating water and energy cycle in the Tibetan Plateau, which further impacts regional climate. However, the quality of existing soil moisture products over the central to west TP (CWTP) remains unclear due to the lack of in-situ observations. Using rain gauge data from a recently established rainfall network in the CWTP region and by checking the hydrological consistency between surface soil moisture and precipitation, this study performed a first evaluation of several satellite soil moisture products, including those from the Soil Moisture Active Passive (SMAP), the European Space Agency Climate Change Initiative (ESA CCI), and the artificial neural network reproduced AMSR-E/2 retrievals (NNsm) in this area. Results show that: (1) both descending and ascending orbits of the SMAP product generally outperform ESA CCI and NNsm, with more robust hydrological consistency across all rain gauge stations; (2) ESA CCI is subjected to low availability of effective retrievals in this area, with the combined one performs slightly more robust than the active and passive channels; and (3) NNsm possesses the most effective soil moisture retrievals owing to less revisit time of AMSR2, but its hydrological consistency is the lowest as compared to the other two products. Further analysis suggests that large topography and dense vegetation can potentially impact the retrieval accuracy of surface soil moisture and thus hydrological consistency. Besides, relatively large amounts of rainfall is likely to impose more positive increments in surface soil moisture, whereas extremely heavy rainfall may further degrade hydrological consistency. These findings are complementary to existing soil moisture evaluations in the eastern TP, and are expected to contribute to improving soil moisture retrieval algorithms and understanding land–atmosphere interactions over the entire plateau.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Hydrology publishes original research papers and comprehensive reviews in all the subfields of the hydrological sciences including water based management and policy issues that impact on economics and society. These comprise, but are not limited to the physical, chemical, biogeochemical, stochastic and systems aspects of surface and groundwater hydrology, hydrometeorology and hydrogeology. Relevant topics incorporating the insights and methodologies of disciplines such as climatology, water resource systems, hydraulics, agrohydrology, geomorphology, soil science, instrumentation and remote sensing, civil and environmental engineering are included. Social science perspectives on hydrological problems such as resource and ecological economics, environmental sociology, psychology and behavioural science, management and policy analysis are also invited. Multi-and interdisciplinary analyses of hydrological problems are within scope. The science published in the Journal of Hydrology is relevant to catchment scales rather than exclusively to a local scale or site.