Abstract

summary A mesoscale Tibetan Plateau Soil Moisture/Temperature Monitoring Network (SMTMN) has been established to study large-scale soil–vegetation–atmosphere interactions and to validate satellite soil moisture products. Soil moisture at four layers (0–5 cm, 10 cm, 20 cm, and 40 cm) of 30 sites was monitored since July, 2010. This paper firstly introduces the network and then presents preliminary spatiotemporal analyses based on the in situ soil moisture measurements in SMTMN. Three temporal scales (half-hourly, daily, and 10-days) and three time periods corresponding to typical soil wetness conditions, including frozen soil in winter times, are discussed. Primary findings are: (a) generally 13 randomly distributed sites in the study domain are required (i.e. number of required sites) to estimate areal mean soil moisture with correlation coefficient P0.99 and root mean square difference 60.02 m 3 m � 3 . This provides guidance for future soil moisture network establishment in similar regions; (b) both number of required sites and the most representative site are insensitive to temporal scales while conversely sensitive to soil wetness conditions; (c) the combination of a few optimally-selected sites can give more robust estimate of areal mean soil moisture than a single site does because the former contains more information on spatial heterogeneity. These findings can provide not only a practical compromise between maintenance cost and risk on reliability for an existing soil moisture network, but also insights for soil moisture upscaling studies and satellite soil moisture products validations.

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