Title
A Study on the Assessment of Multi-Source Satellite Soil Moisture Products and Reanalysis Data for the Tibetan Plateau.
Abstract
Soil moisture is a key variable in the process of land-atmosphere energy and water exchange. Currently, there are a large number of operational satellite-derived soil moisture products and reanalysis soil moisture products available. However, due to the lack of in situ soil moisture measurements over the Tibetan Plateau (TP), their accuracy and applicability are unclear. Based on the in situ measurements of the soil moisture observing networks established at Maqu, Naqu, Ali, and Shiquanhe (Sq) by the Institute of Tibetan Plateau Research, the Chinese Academy of Sciences, the Northwest Institute of Eco-Environmental Resources, the Chinese Academy of Sciences and the University of Twente over the TP, the accuracy and reliability of the European Space Agency Climate Change Initiative Soil Moisture version 4.4 (ESA CCI SM v4.4) soil moisture products and the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts Reanalysis 5 (ERA5) soil moisture product were evaluated. The spatiotemporal distributions and interannual variations of the soil moisture were analyzed. Further, the climatological soil moisture changing trends across the TP were explored. The results show that with regard to the whole plateau, the combined product performs the best (unbiased root-mean-square error (ubRMSE) = 0.043 m(3)/m(3), R = 0.66), followed by the active product (ubRMSE = 0.048 m(3)/m(3), R = 0.62), the passive product (ubRMSE = 0.06 m(3)/m(3), R = 0.61), and the ERA5 soil moisture product (ubRMSE = 0.067 m(3)/m(3), R = 0.52). Considering the good spatiotemporal data continuity of the ERA5 soil moisture product, the ERA5 soil moisture data from 1979 to 2018 were used to analyze the climatological soil moisture changing trend for the entire TP surface. It was found that there was an increasing trend of soil moisture across the TP, which was consistent with the overall trends of increasing precipitation and decreasing evaporation. Moreover, the shrinkage of the cryosphere in conjunction with the background TP warming presumably contribute to soil moisture change.
Year
DOI
Venue
2019
10.3390/rs11101196
REMOTE SENSING
Keywords
Field
DocType
soil moisture,ESA CCI SM,ERA5,Tibetan Plateau
Plateau,Satellite,Remote sensing,Water content,Geology,Multi-source
Journal
Volume
Issue
Citations 
11
10
0
PageRank 
References 
Authors
0.34
0
7
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Meilin Cheng100.68
Lei Zhong211.71
Yaoming Ma3124.44
Mijun Zou411.04
Nan Ge500.68
Xian Wang65213.41
Yuanyuan Hu710.70