Abstract

Abstract. Soil moisture is a key factor that controls the exchange of water between land surface evaporation and plant transpiration. Information on surface soil moisture variations in both time and spatial domains is important for numerous applications, especially agricultural and environmental monitoring. This study aimed at retrieving surface soil moisture from daily MODIS and AMSR-E (Advanced Microwave Scanning Radiometer – Earth Observing System) data. A case study was conducted in Taiwan for 2009. Data were processed using the Temperature Vegetation Dryness Index (TVDI). This index is developed based on an empirical analysis of the relationship between land surface temperature (LST) and normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) data. The comparison between the TVDI results and the daily precipitation data collected from meteorological stations throughout the study area indicated that there were close relationships between the two datasets. The TDVI results (values range from 0 to 1) were converted to the same unit with the AMSR-E soil moisture data (i.e., g cm-3) by linear regression analysis between these two datasets. The results achieved by this analysis were soil moisture maps that had a better spatial resolution (1 km × 1 km) than the AMSE-E soil moisture data (25 km × 25 km). The soil moisture achieved by TVDI – AMSR-E regression analysis showed the comparable spatial patterns with those from the AMSR-E soil moisture data. A quantitative analysis between the soil moisture (deduced from TVDI-AMSR-E analysis) and the AMSR-E soil moisture data also reaffirmed significant correlations between the two datasets. This study has demonstrated a method of surface soil moisture retrieval from MODIS and AMSR-E data.

Highlights

  • Information on surface soil moisture conditions is important for water management for specific crops

  • temperature vegetation dryness index (TVDI) results were compared with daily rainfall data obtained from two rain gauge stations in the study area to investigate the relationships between the two datasets

  • The TVDI was estimated by empirical analysis of normalized difference vegetative index (NDVI)-land surface temperature (LST) space

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Summary

Introduction

Information on surface soil moisture conditions is important for water management for specific crops. Monitoring soil moisture is an important activity because agricultural planners need such information to devise better water and crop management strategies for agricultural development. Surface soil moisture can be monitored using climatic indices such as Palmer drought severity index (PDSI) (Palmer, 1965) and standardized precipitation index (SPI) (McKee et al, 1993). AMSR-E (Advanced Microwave Scanning Radiometer-Earth Observing System onboard Aqua satellite) index (g cm-3, 25-km resolution) can be used for global soil moisture monitoring. This index is coarse and unsuitable to be applied for the monitoring purpose in Taiwan. The combination of these two NDVI and LST can provide more complete information on soil moisture (Carlson, 2007)

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