Abstract

Water use efficiency (WUE) is a key index for understanding the ecosystem of carbon–water coupling. The undistinguishable carbon–water coupling mechanism and uncertainties of indirect methods by remote sensing products and process models render challenges for WUE remote sensing. In this paper, current progress in direct and indirect methods of WUE estimation by remote sensing is reviewed. Indirect methods based on gross primary production (GPP)/evapotranspiration (ET) from ground observation, processed models and remote sensing are the main ways to estimate WUE in which carbon and water cycles are independent processes. Various empirical models based on meteorological variables and remote sensed vegetation indices to estimate WUE proved the ability of remotely sensed data for WUE estimating. The analytical model provides a mechanistic opportunity for WUE estimation on an ecosystem scale, while the hypothesis has yet to be validated and applied for the shorter time scales. An optimized response of canopy conductance to atmospheric vapor pressure deficit (VPD) in an analytical model inverted from the conductance model has been also challenged. Partitioning transpiration (T) and evaporation (E) is a more complex phenomenon than that stated in the analytic model and needs a more precise remote sensing retrieval algorithm as well as ground validation, which is an opportunity for remote sensing to extrapolate WUE estimation from sites to a regional scale. Although studies on controlling the mechanism of environmental factors have provided an opportunity to improve WUE remote sensing, the mismatch in the spatial and temporal resolution of meteorological products and remote sensing data, as well as the uncertainty of meteorological reanalysis data, add further challenges. Therefore, improving the remote sensing-based methods of GPP and ET, developing high-quality meteorological forcing datasets and building mechanistic remote sensing models directly acting on carbon–water cycle coupling are possible ways to improve WUE remote sensing. Improvement in direct WUE remote sensing methods or remote sensing-driven ecosystem analysis methods can promote a better understanding of the global ecosystem carbon–water coupling mechanisms and vegetation functions–climate feedbacks to serve for the future global carbon neutrality.

Highlights

  • IntroductionAs an independent ecological of the ecosystem responding to global ischanges, a key measurement to link the carbon to and water of and ecosystems

  • Water use efficiency (WUE) is a key metric of carbon–water coupling maintaining the trade-off between photosynthesis and water vapor loss on plant function, which is often defined as the ratio of gross primary production (GPP) and evapotranspiration (ET) on the ecosystem scale [1,2,3,4,5,6]

  • This review provides a direction for the step of research work on ecosystem WUE remote sensing

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Summary

Introduction

As an independent ecological of the ecosystem responding to global ischanges, a key measurement to link the carbon to and water of and ecosystems. The retrieval of spatial-temporal varmechanism of WUE on regional scale ecosystems is helpful to evaluate and predict the iability and control mechanism of WUE on regional scale ecosystems is helpful to evaluate impact of global changes on ecosystem water and carbon processes [18]. Issues concerning the inconsistent response to environmental factors and indiscoupling mechanisms need to be resolved for effectively evaluating ecosystem functions tinct carbon–water coupling mechanisms need to be resolved for effectively evaluating with a higher requirement of long-lasting continuous and consistent spatial measurements ecosystem functions with a higher requirement of long-lasting continuous and consistent to capture changes in water–carbon cycles.

Trends
Definition of Ecosystem WUE
Measurements Using Eddy Covariance Observations
Advanced Indirect WUE Estimation via Process-Based Modeling
Advances in Indirect WUE Estimation by Remote Sensing
Advances in Direct Estimation of Ecosystem WUE by Remote Sensing
Scatterplots
Vegetation Growth Dominates the Seasonal Variability of the Ecosystem WUE
Challenges of Ecosystem WUE Remote Sensing
High-Quality Remote Sensed Vegetation Parameters for Direct Methods
Data Fusion Improves GPP and ET Products
Remote Sensing Methods Coupled with an Analytical Model
Findings
Conclusions
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