Abstract

Evapotranspiration is the major component of the water cycle, so a correct estimate of this variable is fundamental. The purpose of the present research is to assess the monthly scale accuracy of six meteorological data-based models in the prediction of evapotranspiration (ET) losses by comparing the modelled fluxes with the observed ones from eight sites equipped with eddy covariance stations which differ in terms of vegetation and climate type. Three potential ET methods (Penman-Monteith, Priestley-Taylor, and Blaney-Criddle models) and three actual ET models (the Advection-Aridity, the Granger and Gray, and the Antecedent Precipitation Index method) have been proposed. The findings show that the models performances differ from site to site and they depend on the vegetation and climate characteristics. Indeed, they show a wide range of error values ranging from 0.18 to 2.78. It has been not possible to identify a single model able to outperform the others in each biome, but in general, the Advection-Aridity approach seems to be the most accurate, especially when the model calibration in not carried out. It returns very low error values close to 0.38. When the calibration procedure is performed, the most accurate model is the Granger and Gray approach with minimum error of 0.13 but, at the same time, it is the most impacted by this process, and therefore, in a context of data scarcity, it results the less recommended for ET prediction. The performances of the investigated ET approaches have been furthermore tested in case of lack of measured data of soil heat fluxes and net radiation considering using empirical relationships based on meteorological data to derive these variables. Results show that, the use of empirical formulas to derive ET estimates increases the errors up to 200% with the consequent loss of model accuracy.

Highlights

  • Evapotranspiration (ET) is the major component of the water cycle [1]

  • The values of the moisture index (IM ) (Table 4) calculated for each test site, suggest that four sites can be classified as arid or semi-arid including us-twt, us-arm, us-me3, us-tw1 while us-fwf, de-rur, de-hai, and de-sfn can be listed among the humid and sub-humid climatic types

  • A site-specific calibration procedure has been performed in order to reduce the prediction errors of the selected models

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Evapotranspiration (ET) is the major component of the water cycle [1]. It is fundamental in many different applied hydrology studies [2,3], its incorrect assessments impact the hydrological soil–water balance [4]. Flux towers coverage at the global scale is quite inhomogeneous and quite scarce in some areas of the world For all these reasons, in time, many scholars have proposed different models for the prediction of actual (AET) and potential (PET) ET. The reason is the simplicity of computation and in the large availability of meteorological data required for the simulation [6,7]. This aspect is essential especially in rural water basin contexts where the lack of data represents the major challenge in evapotranspiration water losses assessment [8,9]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call