Abstract

Abstract. Determining the spatial distribution and temporal development of evaporation at regional and global scales is required to improve our understanding of the coupled water and energy cycles and to better monitor any changes in observed trends and variability of linked hydrological processes. With recent international efforts guiding the development of long-term and globally distributed flux estimates, continued product assessments are required to inform upon the selection of suitable model structures and also to establish the appropriateness of these multi-model simulations for global application. In support of the objectives of the Global Energy and Water Cycle Exchanges (GEWEX) LandFlux project, four commonly used evaporation models are evaluated against data from tower-based eddy-covariance observations, distributed across a range of biomes and climate zones. The selected schemes include the Surface Energy Balance System (SEBS) approach, the Priestley–Taylor Jet Propulsion Laboratory (PT-JPL) model, the Penman–Monteith-based Mu model (PM-Mu) and the Global Land Evaporation Amsterdam Model (GLEAM). Here we seek to examine the fidelity of global evaporation simulations by examining the multi-model response to varying sources of forcing data. To do this, we perform parallel and collocated model simulations using tower-based data together with a global-scale grid-based forcing product. Through quantifying the multi-model response to high-quality tower data, a better understanding of the subsequent model response to the coarse-scale globally gridded data that underlies the LandFlux product can be obtained, while also providing a relative evaluation and assessment of model performance. Using surface flux observations from 45 globally distributed eddy-covariance stations as independent metrics of performance, the tower-based analysis indicated that PT-JPL provided the highest overall statistical performance (0.72; 61 W m−2; 0.65), followed closely by GLEAM (0.68; 64 W m−2; 0.62), with values in parentheses representing the R2, RMSD and Nash–Sutcliffe efficiency (NSE), respectively. PM-Mu (0.51; 78 W m−2; 0.45) tended to underestimate fluxes, while SEBS (0.72; 101 W m−2; 0.24) overestimated values relative to observations. A focused analysis across specific biome types and climate zones showed considerable variability in the performance of all models, with no single model consistently able to outperform any other. Results also indicated that the global gridded data tended to reduce the performance for all of the studied models when compared to the tower data, likely a response to scale mismatch and issues related to forcing quality. Rather than relying on any single model simulation, the spatial and temporal variability at both the tower- and grid-scale highlighted the potential benefits of developing an ensemble or blended evaporation product for global-scale LandFlux applications. Challenges related to the robust assessment of the LandFlux product are also discussed.

Highlights

  • Characterizing the exchange of water between the land surface and the atmosphere is a topic of multi-disciplinary interest, as the processes that comprise this dynamic cycling of water determine the spatial and temporal variability of hydrological responses across local and global scales

  • Leaf area index and fractional vegetation cover were estimated from normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) data obtained from the Global Inventory Monitoring and Modelling Study (GIMMS) data set (Tucker et al, 2005), at 8 km spatial and bi-monthly temporal resolutions

  • The specific biomes examined in this work include wetland (WET), grassland (GRA), cropland (CRO), shrubland (SHR), evergreen needleleaf forest (ENF), evergreen broadleaf forest (EBF) and deciduous broadleaf forest (DBF)

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Summary

Introduction

Characterizing the exchange of water between the land surface and the atmosphere is a topic of multi-disciplinary interest, as the processes that comprise this dynamic cycling of water determine the spatial and temporal variability of hydrological responses across local and global scales. While evaporation represents the key process returning the Earth’s surface water to the overlying atmosphere and provides the linking mechanism between the water and energy cycles, it is only in relatively recent times that effort has been directed towards the development of global products (Mu et al, 2007; Fisher et al, 2008; Vinukollu et al, 2011a) To address this observation limitation, a number of evaporation modelling approaches have been developed over the past few years to enable estimation at scales beyond the field, using satellite remote sensing (Sheffield et al, 2010; Miralles et al, 2011a) and other data sources (Douville et al, 2013). The primary purpose of the gridbased analysis is to better understand the effects of largescale forcing data on the accuracy of global retrievals, relative to the tower-based evaluations

Description of tower-based forcing data
Model-specific forcing data and data sources
Definition of selected biome type and climate zones
LandFlux model descriptions
PT-JPL
Model simulation and analysis
Relative performance of the models when using tower-based and gridded data
Performance of the models across biomes
Performance of the models over climate zones
Discussion
Conclusions
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