Abstract

Accurate evapotranspiration (ET) estimation is important in understanding the hydrological cycle and improving water resource management. The operational simplified surface energy balance (SSEBop) model can be set up quickly for the routine monitoring of ET. Several studies have suggested that the SSEBop model, which can simulate ET, has performed inconsistently across the United States. There are few detailed studies on the evaluation of ET simulated by SSEBop in other regions. To explore the potential and application scope of the SSEBop model, more evaluation of the ET simulated by SSEBop is clearly needed. We calculated the SSEBop-model-based ET (ETSSEBopYRB) with land surface temperature product of MOD11A2 and climate variables as inputs for the Yellow River Basin (YRB), China. We also compared the ETSSEBopYRB with eight coarse resolution ET products, including China ETMTE, produced using the upscaling energy flux method; China ETCR, which is generated using the non-linear complementary relationship model; three global products based on the Penman–Monteith logic (ETPMLv2, ETMODIS, and ETBESS), two global ET products based on the surface energy balance (ETSEBS, ETSSEBopGlo), and integrated ET products based on the Bayesian model averaging method (ETGLASS), using the annual ET data derived from the water balance method (WB-ET) for fourteen catchments. We found that ETSSEBopYRB and the other eight ET products were able to explain 23 to 52% of the variability in the water balance ET for fourteen small catchments in the YRB. ETSSEBopYRB had a better agreement with WB-ET than ETSEBS, ETMODIS, ETCR, and ETGLASS, with lower RMSE (88.3 mm yr−1 vs. 121.7 mm yr−1), higher R2 (0.49 vs. 0.43), and lower absolute RPE (−3.3% vs. –19.9%) values for the years 2003–2015. We also found that the uncertainties of the spatial patterns of the average annual ET values and the ET trends were still large for different ET products. Third, we found that the free global ET product derived from the SSEBop model (ETSSEBopGlo) highly underestimated the annual total ET trend for the YRB. The poor performance of the land surface temperature product of MOD11A2 in 2015 caused the large ETSSEBopYRB uncertainty at eight-day and monthly scales. Further evaluation of ET based on the SSEBop model for site measurements is needed.

Highlights

  • Evapotranspiration (ET) is an essential water flux that connects the soil, vegetation, and atmosphere

  • Sixteen-day interval normalized vegetation index (NDVI) images (MOD13A2 and MYD13A2 version 6 (V6) products) and 8-day interval land surface temperature (LST) images (MOD11A2 and MYD11A2 version6 (V6) products) with a spatial resolution of 1 km covering the whole Yellow River Basin (YRB) were downloaded from the Level-1 and Atmosphere Archive & Distribution System (LAADS) Distributed Active Archive Center (DAAC) website

  • The data inputs of ETMODIS are land cover (MOD12Q1), FPAR/Leaf area index (MOD15A2H), albedo (MOD43C1), and global Modern-Era Retrospective Analysis for Research and Applications (MERRA) meteorological data provided by the NASA Global Modeling and Assimilation Office (GMAO)

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Summary

Introduction

Evapotranspiration (ET) is an essential water flux that connects the soil, vegetation, and atmosphere. Singh et al (2013) estimated the Colorado River Basin ET by applying Landsat images and SSEBop, finding that the SSEBop model captured the annual ET variability well at the site level and sub-basin level [25]. Other research has reported that the SSEBop model performed well over the CONUS, with an R2 of 0.86 between the estimated ET and the ET of 42 flux tower sites from 2001 to 2007 [32]. SSEBop was consistently the worst-performing model among SEBAL, METRIC, S-SEBI, SEBS, and SSEBop, and it overestimated ET at all sites when estimating humid southeastern United States ET by Landsat imaging from 2000 to 2010 [33], indicating its limited applicability in the southeastern US. Remote Sens. 2020, 12, x; doi: FOR PEER REVIEW www.mdpi.com/journal/remotesensing

MODIS Data
Meteorological Data
ET Products
Method
Regional Database for ET Model Evaluation
Trend Analysis
Performance of Estimated ET
Evaluation of SSEBopYRB-ET on a Basin Scale
DiscEuTBsEsSiSon
Influence of the Land Surface Temperature Product on ET Uncertainty
Influence of Precipitation Products on ET Uncertainty
Conclusions
Results
Full Text
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