4.7 Article

Separating soil evaporation from vegetation transpiration by remotely sensed one-phase and two-phase trapezoids

Journal

AGRICULTURAL AND FOREST METEOROLOGY
Volume 327, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.agrformet.2022.109215

Keywords

Evapotranspiration; Vegetation transpiration; Surface temperature versus fractional; vegetation cover trapezoid; Eddy covariance; ET partitioning methods

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41921001, 42071332, 41922009, 42001310]
  2. Fundamental Research Funds for Central Non-profit Scientific Institution [1610132020007]

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This study evaluated the application of one-phase and two-phase trapezoids in separating soil evaporation and vegetation transpiration. The results showed that the two-phase trapezoid integrated with the layered approach had the best consistency with the five partitioning methods.
Partition of land surface evapotranspiration (ET) into soil evaporation (ETsoil) and vegetation transpiration (ETveg) is of great significance for scheduling agricultural irrigation, improving water-use efficiency of crop, and managing water resources. This study made a comprehensive evaluation of one-phase and two-phase surface temperature versus fractional vegetation cover trapezoids in the separation of soil evaporation from vegetation transpiration through analytical deductions and model applications, with surface temperatures at four endmembers determined from the layered approach and the patch approach. The two trapezoids were tested on the MODIS data during June to September in 2012 at Daman superstation in Northwest China. The trapezoidestimated ratios of transpiration to total ET (ETveg/ET) were intercompared with the ETveg/ET from five typical partitioning methods, namely, the stable isotope-method, the underlying water-use efficiency (uWUE) method, the transpiration estimation algorithm (TEA), the Pe ' rez-Priego method, and the Wei method. Results showed that: 1) The two-phase trapezoid integrated with the layered approach and the one-phase trapezoid integrated with the layered approach performed the best and worst with root-mean-square errors of 52.6 W/m2 and 78.6 W/m2, respectively, when the estimated total ET was validated against the Bowen Ratio corrected eddy covariance measurements. 2) The five partitioning methods produced largely different ETveg/ET, with the highest values from the TEA method and the lowest values from the Pe ' rez-Priego method. 3) The estimated vegetation transpiration and ETveg/ET by the two-phase trapezoid were generally higher than those by the one-phase trapezoid. 4) In the intercomparison of ETveg/ET, the layered approach agreed better with the five partitioning methods than the patch approach. 5) The two-phase trapezoid integrated with the layered approach overall produced the most consistent estimates of ETveg/ET with those from the five partitioning methods, with the lowest bias varying between -30.9% and 8.7% and root-mean-square differences varying between 16.8% and 36.8%. In summary, the two-phase trapezoid is theoretically more rational and appears to outperform the onephase trapezoid. This study is beneficial for a better understanding of the differences, similarities, advantages and weaknesses of the one-phase and two-phase trapezoids in the partition of total ET to its soil and vegetation components.

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