Abstract

AbstractThe reliability of irrigated area (IA) information dominates the performance of irrigation water use and crop modeling accuracy. IA is typically mapped using Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) agricultural census and remote sensing indices. Recent advances in machine learning and sampling techniques further improve IA mapping. However, the relative performances of different IA mapping approaches and their capability in capturing long‐term IA temporal variability remain unknown. Here, 1861 county‐level IA information from Government Censored Data (GCD) during 2000–2021 are collected, cross‐validated, and employed to evaluate commonly used gridded IA data sets. Results show that IA data sets based on the direct interpolation of FAO agricultural census can accurately capture the spatial distribution of IA. However, FAO statistics are only available in a particular year, which cannot capture inter‐annual irrigation variations. In contrast, IA products solely based on vegetation indices are prone to positive biases over humid regions due to the lack of contrast in vegetation dynamics. Overall, the latest GCD‐based machine learning IA data sets are relatively more accurate, but they are also problematic in estimating IA trends due to the use of temporally static training samples. Such biases are tightly related to agricultural suitability (AS calculated using precipitation and potential evapotranspiration). This suggests that AS should be employed as an endogenous variable in future machine learning based IA mapping algorithms.

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