Abstract
Soil moisture (SM) is an important variable for the terrestrial surface system, as its changes greatly affect the global water and energy cycle. The description and understanding of spatiotemporal changes in global soil moisture require long time-series observation. Taking advantage of the European Space Agency (ESA) Climate Change Initiative (CCI) combined SM dataset, this study aims at identifying the non-linear trends of global SM dynamics and their variations at multiple time scales. The distribution of global surface SM changes in 1979–2016 was identified by a non-linear methodology based on a stepwise regression at the annual and seasonal scales. On the annual scale, significant changes have taken place in about one third of the lands, in which nonlinear trends account for 48.13%. At the seasonal scale, the phenomenon that “wet season get wetter, and dry season get dryer” is found this study via hemispherical SM trend analysis at seasonal scale. And, the changes in seasonal SM are more pronounced (change rate at seasonal scales is about 5 times higher than that at annual scale) and the areas seeing significant changes cover a larger surface. Seasonal SM fluctuations distributed in southwestern China, central North America and southern Africa, are concealed at the annual scale. Overall, non-linear trend analysis at multiple time scale has revealed more complex dynamics for these long time series of SM.
Highlights
Soil moisture (SM), as an important element of the land surface system, playing an indispensable role in ecology, agriculture, as well as hydrological and surface modeling research [1]
To verify the results based on the European Space Agency (ESA) Climate Change Initiative (CCI) SM dataset, the ERA-Interim reanalysis SM dataset has been analyzed via same methodology
Comparing the global maps of mean SM from 1979–2016, the map generated from the ESA CCI SM dataset (Figure 3b) is more detailed than that obtained from the ERA-Interim SM dataset (Figure 9a)
Summary
Soil moisture (SM), as an important element of the land surface system, playing an indispensable role in ecology, agriculture, as well as hydrological and surface modeling research [1]. It stores precipitation, provides essential water for plants, affecting ecosystem development, and participates in the global water cycle and energy balance through evapotranspiration. The extent which global SM has changed is a paramount issue pertaining to climate change and its variability, due to the importance and heterogeneity of these variations [2] In view of this problem, some research has been conducted. The disadvantage of simple linear analysis is that the overall trend of SM during long time may conceal the actual change and change rate in different periods,
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