Spatial and Temporal Distribution of Soil Moisture at the Catchment Scale Using Remotely-Sensed Energy Fluxes
Creators
- 1. Lab of Remote Sensing and GIS, Faculty of Agriculture, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Thessaloniki 54124, Greece
- 2. Aristotle University of Thessaloniki
- 3. Lab of Applied Soil Science, Faculty of Agriculture, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Thessaloniki 54124, Greece
- 4. Center for Weather Forecast and Climate Analysis, Brazilian National Institute for Space Research, Cachoeira Paulista 12630-000, Brazil
- 5. Integrated Water Systems and Governance Department, UNESCO-IHE Institute for Water Education, Delft 2611 AX, The Netherlands
Description
Despite playing a critical role in the division of precipitation between runoff and infiltration, soil moisture (SM) is difficult to estimate at the catchment scale and at frequent time steps, as is required by many hydrological, erosion and flood simulation models. In this work, an integrated methodology is described to estimate SM at the root zone, based on the remotely-sensed evaporative fraction (Λ) and ancillary information on soil and meteorology. A time series of Terra MODIS satellite images was used to estimate SM maps with an eight-day time step at a 250-m spatial resolution for three diverse catchments in Europe. The study of the resulting SM maps shows that their spatial variability follows the pattern of land cover types and the main geomorphological features of the catchment, and their temporal pattern follows the distribution of rain events, with the exception of irrigated land. Field surveys provided in situ measurements to validate the SM maps' accuracy, which proved to be variable according to site and season. In addition, several factors were analyzed in order to explain the variation in the accuracy, and it was shown that the land cover type, the soil texture class, the temporal difference between the datasets' acquisition and the presence of rain events during the measurements played a significant role, rather than the often referred to scale difference between in situ and satellite observations. Therefore, the proposed methodology can be used operationally to estimate SM maps at the catchment scale, with a 250-m spatial resolution and an eight-day time step.
Open Access
Licence Attribution (CC BY)
Publisher Website
Access full text
Publication Details
Journal article
Funding
Financial Support
Seventh Framework Programme — Grant: 263188
Read more
References
Hendrickx, J.M., Honga, S.-H., Friesenb, J., Compaorec, H., van de Giesenb, N.C....
Read more
Manfreda . Scaling characteristics of spatial patterns of soil moisture from dis...
Read more
Rao . Optimal spatial sampling techniques for ground truth data in microwave rem...
Read more
Shannon . A mathematical theory of communication, Bell Syst. Tech. J.. 1948; 27 ...
Read more
Heathman . Surface and profile soil moisture spatio-temporal analysis during an ...
Read more
Showing first 5 of 52 references.