Abstract

Evapotranspiration plays an inevitable role in various fields of hydrology and agriculture. Reference evapotranspiration (ET0) is mostly applied in irrigation planning and monitoring. An accurate estimation of ET0 contributes to decision and policymaking processes governing water resource management, efficiency, and productivity. Direct measurements of ET0, however, are difficult to achieve, often requiring empirical methods. The Penman–Monteith FAO56 (PM-FAO56) method, for example, is still considered to be the best way of estimating ET0 in most regions of the globe. However, it requires a large number of meteorological variables, often restricting its applicability in regions with poor or missing meteorological observations. Furthermore, the objectivity of some elements of the empirical equations often used can be highly variable from region to region. The result is a need to find an alternative, objective method that can more accurately estimate ET0 in regions of interest. This study was conducted in the Hexi corridor, Northwest China. In it we aimed to evaluate the applicability of 32 simple empirical ET0 models designed under different climatic conditions with different data inputs requirements. The models evaluated in this study are classified into three types of methods based on temperature, solar radiation, and mass transfer. The performance of 32 simple equations compared to the PM-FAO56 model is evaluated based on model evaluation techniques including root mean square error (RMSE), mean absolute error (MAE), percentage bias (PBIAS), and Nash–Sutcliffe efficiency (NSE). The results show that the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) and the Mahringer (MAHR) models perform well and are ranked as the best alternative methods to estimate daily and monthly ET0 in the Hexi corridor. The WMO and MAHR performed well with monthly mean RMSE = 0.46 mm and 0.56 mm, PBIAS = 12.1% and −11.0%, and NSE = 0.93 and 0.93, before calibration, respectively. After calibration, both models showed significant improvements with approximately equal PBIAS of −2.5%, NSE = 0.99, and RMSE of 0.24 m. Calibration also significantly reduced the PBIAS of the Romanenko (ROM) method by 82.12% and increased the NSE by 16.7%.

Highlights

  • Reference evapotranspiration (ET0 ) is an essential element of the hydrological cycle, energy, and water balance [1,2]

  • Statistical metrics for the Hexi corridor obtained from comparisons between ET0 calculated from PM-FAO56 and 32 alternatives are shown in Figures 2 and 3 for daily and monthly timescales, respectively

  • The results reveal that the World Meteorological Organization (WMO), MAHR, the results the 13 validated and ROM methods remain the best substitute models to estimate the ET0 in the Hexi corridor

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Summary

Introduction

Reference evapotranspiration (ET0 ) is an essential element of the hydrological cycle, energy, and water balance [1,2]. It plays a crucial role in the fields of agricultural and hydrological projects [3,4]. The lysimetric method is one of the micrometeorological techniques used to measure in situ ET0 values, and it is often considered the sole method of achieving accurate ET0 estimates. This method, has great shortcomings associated with high costs and complex instrumentation [7,8]. A variety of empirical methods have been developed for the task according to different climate conditions [9,10,11,12]

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