Surface energy balance and actual evapotranspiration of the transboundary Indus Basin estimated from satellite measurements and the ETLook model
Publication date
2012
Authors
Bastiaansen, W.G.M.
Cheema, M.J.M.
Immerzeel, W.W.
Miltenburg, I.J.
Pelgrum, H.
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Supervisors
Document Type
Article
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(c) UU Universiteit Utrecht, 2012
Abstract
The surface energy fluxes and related evapotranspiration processes across the Indus
Basin were estimated for the hydrological year 2007 using satellite measurements. The new
ETLook remote sensing model (version 1) infers information on actual Evaporation (E) and
actual Transpiration (T) from combined optical and passive microwave sensors, which can
observe the land-surface even under persistent overcast conditions. A two-layer
Penman–Monteith equation was applied for quantifying soil and canopy evaporation. The
novelty of the paper is the computation of E and T across a vast area (116.2 million ha) by
using public domain microwave data that can be applied under all weather conditions, and
for which no advanced input data are required. The average net radiation for the basin was
estimated as being 112 Wm 2. The basin average sensible, latent and soil heat fluxes were
estimated to be 80, 32, and 0Wm 2, respectively. The average evapotranspiration (ET) and
evaporative fraction were 1.2 mm d 1 and 0.28, respectively. The basin wide ET was 496 6
16.8 km3 yr 1. Monte Carlo analysis have indicated 3.4% error at 95% confidence interval for
a dominant land use class. Results compared well with previously conducted soil moisture,
lysimeter and Bowen ratio measurements at field scale (R2 ¼ 0.70; RMSE ¼ 0.45 mm d 1;
RE ¼ –11.5% for annual ET). ET results were also compared against earlier remote sensing and
modeling studies for various regions and provinces in Pakistan (R2 ¼ 0.76; RMSE ¼ 0.29
mmd 1; RE ¼ 6.5% for annual ET). The water balance for all irrigated areas together as one
total system in Pakistan and India (26.02 million ha) show a total ET value that is congruent
with the ET value from the ETLook surface energy balance computations. An unpublished
validation of the same ETLook model for 23 jurisdictional areas covering the entire Australian
continent showed satisfactory results given the quality of the watershed data and the diverging
physiographic and climatic conditions (R2 ¼ 0.70; RMSE ¼ 0.31 mmd 1; RE ¼ –2.8%
for annual ET). Eight day values of latent heat fluxes in Heibei (China) showed a good
resemblance (R2 ¼ 0.92; RMSE ¼ 0.04 mm d 1; RE ¼ 9.5% for annual ET). It is
concluded that ETLook is a novel model that can be operationalized further—especially after
improving the preprocessing of spaceborne soil moisture data. This preprocessing includes
(1) downscaling of topsoil moisture from 25 to 1 km pixels, and (2) translation of topsoil
moisture into subsoil moisture values.