Inter-comparison of energy balance and hydrological models for land surface energy flux estimation over a whole river catchment

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Inter-comparison of energy balance and hydrological models for land surface energy flux estimation over a whole river catchment. / Guzinski, R.; Nieto, H.; Stisen, S.; Fensholt, R.

In: Hydrology and Earth System Sciences, Vol. 19, No. 4, 24.04.2015, p. 2017-2036.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Guzinski, R, Nieto, H, Stisen, S & Fensholt, R 2015, 'Inter-comparison of energy balance and hydrological models for land surface energy flux estimation over a whole river catchment', Hydrology and Earth System Sciences, vol. 19, no. 4, pp. 2017-2036. https://doi.org/10.5194/hess-19-2017-2015

APA

Guzinski, R., Nieto, H., Stisen, S., & Fensholt, R. (2015). Inter-comparison of energy balance and hydrological models for land surface energy flux estimation over a whole river catchment. Hydrology and Earth System Sciences, 19(4), 2017-2036. https://doi.org/10.5194/hess-19-2017-2015

Vancouver

Guzinski R, Nieto H, Stisen S, Fensholt R. Inter-comparison of energy balance and hydrological models for land surface energy flux estimation over a whole river catchment. Hydrology and Earth System Sciences. 2015 Apr 24;19(4):2017-2036. https://doi.org/10.5194/hess-19-2017-2015

Author

Guzinski, R. ; Nieto, H. ; Stisen, S. ; Fensholt, R. / Inter-comparison of energy balance and hydrological models for land surface energy flux estimation over a whole river catchment. In: Hydrology and Earth System Sciences. 2015 ; Vol. 19, No. 4. pp. 2017-2036.

Bibtex

@article{8358bf1ce4e54de69a705b94ce8e43b2,
title = "Inter-comparison of energy balance and hydrological models for land surface energy flux estimation over a whole river catchment",
abstract = "Evapotranspiration (ET) is the main link between the natural water cycle and the land surface energy budget. Therefore water-balance and energy-balance approaches are two of the main methodologies for modelling this process. The water-balance approach is usually implemented as a complex, distributed hydrological model, while the energy-balance approach is often used with remotely sensed observations of, for example, the land surface temperature (LST) and the state of the vegetation. In this study we compare the catchment-scale output of two remote sensing models based on the two-source energy-balance (TSEB) scheme, against a hydrological model, MIKE SHE, calibrated over the Skjern river catchment in western Denmark. The three models utilize different primary inputs to estimate ET (LST from different satellites in the case of remote sensing models and modelled soil moisture and heat flux in the case of the MIKE SHE ET module). However, all three of them use the same ancillary data (meteorological measurements, land cover type and leaf area index, etc.) and produce output at similar spatial resolution (1 km for the TSEB models, 500 m for MIKE SHE). The comparison is performed on the spatial patterns of the fluxes present within the catchment area as well as on temporal patterns on the whole catchment scale in 8-year long time series. The results show that the spatial patterns of latent heat flux produced by the remote sensing models are more similar to each other than to the fluxes produced by MIKE SHE. The temporal patterns produced by the remote sensing and hydrological models are quite highly correlated (r ≈ 0.8). This indicates potential benefits to the hydrological modelling community of integrating spatial information derived through remote sensing methodology (contained in the ET maps derived with the energy-balance models, satellite based LST or another source) into the hydrological models. How this could be achieved and how to evaluate the improvements, or lack of thereof, is still an open research question.",
author = "R. Guzinski and H. Nieto and S. Stisen and R. Fensholt",
year = "2015",
month = apr,
day = "24",
doi = "10.5194/hess-19-2017-2015",
language = "English",
volume = "19",
pages = "2017--2036",
journal = "Hydrology and Earth System Sciences",
issn = "1027-5606",
publisher = "Copernicus GmbH",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Inter-comparison of energy balance and hydrological models for land surface energy flux estimation over a whole river catchment

AU - Guzinski, R.

AU - Nieto, H.

AU - Stisen, S.

AU - Fensholt, R.

PY - 2015/4/24

Y1 - 2015/4/24

N2 - Evapotranspiration (ET) is the main link between the natural water cycle and the land surface energy budget. Therefore water-balance and energy-balance approaches are two of the main methodologies for modelling this process. The water-balance approach is usually implemented as a complex, distributed hydrological model, while the energy-balance approach is often used with remotely sensed observations of, for example, the land surface temperature (LST) and the state of the vegetation. In this study we compare the catchment-scale output of two remote sensing models based on the two-source energy-balance (TSEB) scheme, against a hydrological model, MIKE SHE, calibrated over the Skjern river catchment in western Denmark. The three models utilize different primary inputs to estimate ET (LST from different satellites in the case of remote sensing models and modelled soil moisture and heat flux in the case of the MIKE SHE ET module). However, all three of them use the same ancillary data (meteorological measurements, land cover type and leaf area index, etc.) and produce output at similar spatial resolution (1 km for the TSEB models, 500 m for MIKE SHE). The comparison is performed on the spatial patterns of the fluxes present within the catchment area as well as on temporal patterns on the whole catchment scale in 8-year long time series. The results show that the spatial patterns of latent heat flux produced by the remote sensing models are more similar to each other than to the fluxes produced by MIKE SHE. The temporal patterns produced by the remote sensing and hydrological models are quite highly correlated (r ≈ 0.8). This indicates potential benefits to the hydrological modelling community of integrating spatial information derived through remote sensing methodology (contained in the ET maps derived with the energy-balance models, satellite based LST or another source) into the hydrological models. How this could be achieved and how to evaluate the improvements, or lack of thereof, is still an open research question.

AB - Evapotranspiration (ET) is the main link between the natural water cycle and the land surface energy budget. Therefore water-balance and energy-balance approaches are two of the main methodologies for modelling this process. The water-balance approach is usually implemented as a complex, distributed hydrological model, while the energy-balance approach is often used with remotely sensed observations of, for example, the land surface temperature (LST) and the state of the vegetation. In this study we compare the catchment-scale output of two remote sensing models based on the two-source energy-balance (TSEB) scheme, against a hydrological model, MIKE SHE, calibrated over the Skjern river catchment in western Denmark. The three models utilize different primary inputs to estimate ET (LST from different satellites in the case of remote sensing models and modelled soil moisture and heat flux in the case of the MIKE SHE ET module). However, all three of them use the same ancillary data (meteorological measurements, land cover type and leaf area index, etc.) and produce output at similar spatial resolution (1 km for the TSEB models, 500 m for MIKE SHE). The comparison is performed on the spatial patterns of the fluxes present within the catchment area as well as on temporal patterns on the whole catchment scale in 8-year long time series. The results show that the spatial patterns of latent heat flux produced by the remote sensing models are more similar to each other than to the fluxes produced by MIKE SHE. The temporal patterns produced by the remote sensing and hydrological models are quite highly correlated (r ≈ 0.8). This indicates potential benefits to the hydrological modelling community of integrating spatial information derived through remote sensing methodology (contained in the ET maps derived with the energy-balance models, satellite based LST or another source) into the hydrological models. How this could be achieved and how to evaluate the improvements, or lack of thereof, is still an open research question.

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84928737287&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.5194/hess-19-2017-2015

DO - 10.5194/hess-19-2017-2015

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:84928737287

VL - 19

SP - 2017

EP - 2036

JO - Hydrology and Earth System Sciences

JF - Hydrology and Earth System Sciences

SN - 1027-5606

IS - 4

ER -

ID: 140566991