Abstract

Abstract Distributed hydrological models of energy and mass balance need as inputs many soil and vegetation parameters, which are usually difficult to define. This paper will try to approach this problem by performing a pixel to pixel calibration procedure of soil hydraulic and vegetation parameters based on satellite land surface temperature data as a complementary method to the traditional calibration with ground discharge measurements at river control cross sections. These analyses are performed for the upper Po River basin (Italy) closed at the river cross section of Ponte della Becca with a total catchment area of about 38 000 km2, for a calibration period from 2000 to 2003, and a validation period from 2004 to 2010. Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) land surface temperature data and a distributed hydrological model, Flash-Flood Event-Based Spatially Distributed Rainfall-Runoff Transformation Energy Water Balance model (FEST-EWB), that solves the system of energy and mass balance equations as a function of the representative equilibrium temperature will be used. This equilibrium surface temperature is comparable to the land surface temperature as retrieved from operational remote sensing data. Results suggest that a combined calibration based on satellite land surface temperature and ground discharge is needed to correctly reproduce volume discharge and also spatially distributed maps of representative equilibrium temperature and evapotranspiration. Improvements of about 10 mm/8 days are obtained on evapotranspiration from the model calibrated with Q and land surface temperature (LST) respect to the calibration based only on discharge.

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