Abstract

In the hydrological cycle, evapotranspiration (ET) transfers moisture from the land surface to the atmosphere and is sensitive to disturbances such as wildfires. Ground-based pre- and post-fire measurements of ET are often unavailable, limiting the potential to understand the extent of wildfire impacts on the hydrological cycle. This research estimated both pre- and post-fire ET using remotely sensed variables and support vector machine (SVM) methods. Input variables (land surface temperature, modified soil-adjusted vegetation index, normalized difference moisture index, normalized burn ratio, precipitation, potential evapotranspiration, albedo and vegetation types) were used to train and develop 56 combinations that yielded 33 unique SVM models to predict actual ET. The models were trained to predict a spatial ET, the Operational Simplified Surface Energy Balance (SSEBop), for the 2003 Coyote Fire in San Diego, California (USA). The optimal SVM model, SVM-ET6, required six input variables and predicted ET for fifteen years with a root-mean-square error (RMSE) of 8.43 mm/month and a R2 of 0.89. The developed model was transferred and applied to the 2003 Old Fire in San Bernardino, California (USA), where a watershed balance approach was used to validate SVM-ET6 predictions. The annual water balance for ten out of fifteen years was within ±20% of the predicted values. This work demonstrated machine learning as a viable method to create a remotely-sensed estimate with wide applicability for regions with sparse data observations and information. This innovative work demonstrated the potential benefit for land and forest managers to understand and analyze the hydrological cycle of watersheds that experience acute disturbances based on this developed predictive ET model.

Highlights

  • Evapotranspiration (ET) is a critical process in both ecological and hydrological modeling as it accounts for the loss of moisture from biotic and abiotic sources

  • Sensitivity analysis was performed to identify the combination of input variables that would provide the best support vector machine (SVM) model results

  • One of the simplest models developed, a two-variable model, consisting of land surface temperature (LST) as a main input and modified soil-adjusted vegetation index (MSAVI) to represent the amount of vegetation within a region

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Summary

Introduction

Evapotranspiration (ET) is a critical process in both ecological and hydrological modeling as it accounts for the loss of moisture from biotic and abiotic sources. It is arguably the most difficult hydrologic flux to estimate due to the complex interactions between climate, geologic and geographic variables [1,2]. Disturbances such as wildfires have the potential to significantly alter hydrologic processes [3,4,5]. A thorough understanding of both pre- and post-disturbed ET patterns, both spatially and temporally, is needed to improve ET estimation, which has significant implications for ecosystem and biological processes [8,9]

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