A comparison of methods for determining forest evapotranspiration and its components: sap-flow, soil water budget, eddy covariance and catchment water balance

2001 ◽  
Vol 106 (2) ◽  
pp. 153-168 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kell B Wilson ◽  
Paul J Hanson ◽  
Patrick J Mulholland ◽  
Dennis D Baldocchi ◽  
Stan D Wullschleger
2015 ◽  
Vol 522 ◽  
pp. 250-264 ◽  
Author(s):  
Takanori Shimizu ◽  
Tomo’omi Kumagai ◽  
Masahiro Kobayashi ◽  
Koji Tamai ◽  
Shin’ichi Iida ◽  
...  

2015 ◽  
Vol 12 (9) ◽  
pp. 6783-6820 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Imukova ◽  
J. Ingwersen ◽  
M. Hevart ◽  
T. Streck

Abstract. The energy balance of eddy covariance (EC) flux data is typically not closed. The nature of the gap is usually not known, which hampers using EC data to parameterize and test models. The present study elucidates the nature of the energy gap of EC flux data from winter wheat stands in southwest Germany. During the vegetation periods 2012 and 2013, we continuously measured, in a half-hourly resolution, latent (LE) and sensible (H) heat fluxes using the EC technique. Measured fluxes were adjusted with either the Bowen-ratio (BR), H or LE post-closure method. The adjusted LE fluxes were tested against evapotranspiration data (ETWB) calculated using the soil water balance (WB) method. At sixteen locations within the footprint of an EC station, the soil water storage term was determined by measuring the soil water content down to a soil depth of 1.5 m. In the second year, the volumetric soil water content was also continuously measured in 15 min resolution in 10 cm intervals down to 90 cm depth with sixteen capacitance soil moisture sensors. During the 2012 vegetation period, the H post-closed LE flux data (ETEC = 3.4 ± 0.6 mm day−1) corresponded closest with the result of the WB method (3.3 ± 0.3 mm day−1). ETEC adjusted by the BR (4.1 ± 0.6 mm day−1) or LE (4.9 ± 0.9 mm day−1) post-closure method were higher than the ETWB by 20 and 33%, respectively. In 2013, ETWB was in best agreement with ETEC adjusted with the H post-closure method during the periods with low amount of rain and seepage. During these periods the BR and LE post-closure methods overestimated ET by about 30 and 40%, respectively. During a period with high and frequent rainfalls, ETWB was in-between ETEC adjusted by H and BR post-closure methods. We conclude that, at most vegetation periods on our site, LE is not a~major component of the energy balance gap. Our results indicate that the energy balance gap other energy fluxes and unconsidered or biased energy storage terms.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhongkai Li ◽  
Hu Liu ◽  
Wenzhi Zhao ◽  
Qiyue Yang ◽  
Rong Yang ◽  
...  

Abstract. An accurate assessment of soil water budget components (SWBCs) is necessary for improving irrigation strategies and optimizing the use of fertilizer in any water-limited environment such as the desert oases in arid northwestern China. However, quantitative information of SWBCs is usually challenging to obtain, because, since the water cycle is principally driven by irrigation (I), drainage (D), and evapotranspiration (ET) in desert oasis settings, none of the drivers can be easily measured under actual conditions. Soil moisture is a variable that integrates the water balance components of land surface hydrology, and the evolution of soil moisture is assumed to contain the memory of antecedent hydrologic fluxes, and thus can be used to determine SWBCs from a hydrologic balance. A database of soil moisture measurements from six experimental plots in the middle Heihe River Basin of China (NT1 to NT6, designed to investigate the long-term effects of cropping systems and agronomic manipulation on soil property evolution in the ecotone of desert and oasis) was used to test the potential of a soil moisture database in estimating the SWBCs. The experimental plots were treated as continuous pasture cropping, maize cropping, maize cropping with straw return, maize-maize-pasture rotation, maize-pasture rotation, and maize-pasture intercropping. We first compared the hydrophysical properties of the soils in the plots, including soil bulk density (ρb), vertical saturated hydraulic conductivity (Ks), and soil water retention features, and then determined evapotranspiration and other SWBCs through a data-driven method that combined both the soil water balance method and the inverse Richards function. Our results showed that although the tillage and planting of the past decade have significantly increased the soils' water-holding ability, the magnitude of increase in most of the parameters was independent of the treatments applied across the plots. Despite the relatively flat topography and consciously uniform irrigation, significant variances were observed among the plots in both the cumulative irrigation volumes (between 652.1 mm at NT3 and 1186.5 mm at NT1) and deep drainages (between 170.7 mm at NT3 and 651.8 mm at NT1) during the growing season of 2016. Obvious correlation existed between the volume of irrigation and that of drained water. However, the ET demands for all the plots behaved pretty much the same, with the cumulative ET values ranging between 489.1 and 561.9 mm for the different treatments in 2016, suggesting that the irrigation amounts had limited influence on the accumulated ET throughout the growing season. This work also confirmed that relatively reasonable estimations of the SWBCs in a desert oasis environment can be derived by using soil moisture measurements, and the results will provide a great potential for identifying appropriate irrigation amounts and frequencies, and thus move toward sustainable water resources management, even under traditional surface irrigation conditions.


2011 ◽  
Vol 15 (11) ◽  
pp. 3461-3473 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. A. Breña Naranjo ◽  
M. Weiler ◽  
K. Stahl

Abstract. The hydrology of ecosystem succession gives rise to new challenges for the analysis and modelling of water balance components. Recent large-scale alterations of forest cover across the globe suggest that a significant portion of new biophysical environments will influence the long-term dynamics and limits of water fluxes compared to pre-succession conditions. This study assesses the estimation of summer evapotranspiration along three FLUXNET sites at Campbell River, British Columbia, Canada using a data-driven soil water balance model validated by Eddy Covariance measurements. It explores the sensitivity of the model to different forest succession states, a wide range of computational time steps, rooting depths, and canopy interception capacity values. Uncertainty in the measured EC fluxes resulting in an energy imbalance was consistent with previous studies and does not affect the validation of the model. The agreement between observations and model estimates proves that the usefulness of the method to predict summer AET over mid- and long-term periods is independent of stand age. However, an optimal combination of the parameters rooting depth, time step and interception capacity threshold is needed to avoid an underestimation of AET as seen in past studies. The study suggests that summer AET could be estimated and monitored in many more places than those equipped with Eddy Covariance or sap-flow measurements to advance the understanding of water balance changes in different successional ecosystems.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhongkai Li ◽  
Hu Liu ◽  
Wenzhi Zhao ◽  
Qiyue Yang ◽  
Rong Yang ◽  
...  

Abstract. An accurate assessment of soil water budget components (SWBCs) is necessary for improving irrigation strategies in any water-limited environment. However, quantitative information of SWBCs is usually challenging to obtain, because, since the hydrological process of farmland is principally driven by irrigation (I), drainage (D), and evapotranspiration (ET) in desert oasis settings, none of the drivers can be easily measured under actual conditions. Soil moisture is a variable that integrates the water balance components of land surface hydrology, and the evolution of soil moisture is assumed to contain the memory of antecedent hydrologic fluxes, and thus can be used to determine SWBCs from a hydrologic balance. A database of soil moisture measurements from six experimental plots with different treatments (NT1 to NT6) in the middle Heihe River Basin of China was used to test the potential of a soil moisture database in estimating the SWBCs. We first compared the hydrophysical properties of the soils in these plots, such as vertical saturated hydraulic conductivity (Ks) and soil water retention features, for supporting the SWBC estimations. Then we determined evapotranspiration and other SWBCs through a soil-moisture data-based method that combined both the soil water balance method and the inverse Richards equation. To test the accuracy of our estimation, we used both the indirect methods (such as power consumption of the pumping irrigation well), plenty of published SWBCs values at nearby sites, and the water balance equation technique to verify the estimated SWBCs values, all of which showed a good reliability of our estimation. Finally, the uncertainties of the proposed methods were analyzed to evaluate the systematic error of the SWBC estimation and the restriction for its application. The results showed significant variances among the film-mulched plots (NT2–6) in both the cumulative irrigation volumes (between 652.1 mm at NT3 and 867.3 mm at NT6) and deep drainages (between 170.7 mm at NT3 and 364.7 mm at NT6). Moreover, the unmulched plot (NT1) had remarkably higher values in both cumulative irrigation volumes (1186.5 mm) and deep drainages (651.8 mm) compared with the mulched plots. Obvious correlation existed between the volume of irrigation and that of drained water. However, the ET demands for all the plots behaved pretty much the same, with the cumulative ET values ranging between 489.1 and 561.9 mm for the different treatments in 2016, suggesting that the superfluous irrigation amounts had limited influence on the accumulated ET throughout the growing season because of the poor water-holding capacity of the sandy soil. This work confirmed that relatively reasonable estimations of the SWBCs in coarse-textured sandy soils can be derived by using soil moisture measurements; the proposed methods provided a reliable solution during the entire growing season and showed a great potential for identifying appropriate irrigation amounts and frequencies, and thus a move toward sustainable water resources management, even under traditional surface irrigation conditions.


Author(s):  
Anna Ryken ◽  
David Gochis ◽  
Reed Maxwell

Despite the importance of headwater catchments for western United States’ water supply, these regions are often poorly understood, particularly with respect to quantitative understanding of evapotranspiration (ET) fluxes. Heterogeneity of land cover, physiography, and atmospheric patterns in these high-elevation regions lead to difficulty in developing spatially-distributed characterization of ET. As the largest terrestrial water flux behind precipitation, ET represents a significant fraction of the water budget for any watershed. Likewise, groundwater is the largest available freshwater store and has been shown to play a large role in the water balance, even in headwater systems. Using an eddy covariance tower in the East River Catchment, a Colorado River headwaters basin, this study estimates water and energy fluxes in high-elevation, complex systems to better constrain ET estimates and calculate overall water and energy budgets, including losses from groundwater. The eddy covariance method is used to estimate ET from years 2017 through 2019 at a saturated, riparian end-member site. Owing to complexities in near surface atmospheric structure such as stable boundary layers over snowpack and shallow terrain driven flow from surrounding landscape features, energy flux and ET estimates were limited to the warm season when energy closure residuals from the eddy-covariance system were reliably less than 30 %, a threshold commonly used in eddy covariance energy flux estimation. The resulting ET estimations are useful for constraining water budget estimates at this energy-limited site, which uses groundwater for up to 84 % of ET in the summer months. We also compared East River ET magnitudes and seasonality to two other flux towers (Niwot Ridge, CO and Valles Caldera, NM), located in the Rocky Mountains. This data is useful for constraining ET estimates in similar end-member locations across the East River Catchment. Our results show that groundwater-fed ET is a significant component of the water balance and groundwater may supply riparian ET even during low-snow years.


Author(s):  
Stephen M. Westenbroek ◽  
John A. Engott ◽  
Victor A. Kelson ◽  
Randall J. Hunt

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