European Journal of Remote Sensing (Dec 2023)

Crop water use dynamics over arid and semi-arid croplands in the lower Colorado River Basin

  • Neda Abbasi,
  • Hamideh Nouri,
  • Pamela Nagler,
  • Kamel Didan,
  • Sattar Chavoshi Borujeni,
  • Armando Barreto-Muñoz,
  • Christian Opp,
  • Stefan Siebert

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/22797254.2023.2259244
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 56, no. 1

Abstract

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ABSTRACTNumerous studies have evaluated the application of Remote Sensing (RS) techniques for mapping actual evapotranspiration (ETa) using Vegetation-Index-based (VI-based) and surface energy balance methods (SEB). SEB models computationally require a large effort for application. VI-based methods are fast and easy to apply and could therefore potentially be applied at high resolution; however, the accuracy of VI-based methods in comparison to SEB-based models remains unclear. We tested the ETa computed with the modified 2-band Enhanced Vegetation Index (METEVI2) implemented in the Google Earth Engine – for mapping croplands’ water use dynamics in the Lower Colorado River Basin. We compared METEVI2 with the well-established RS-based products of OpenET (Ensemble, eeMETRIC, SSEBop, SIMS, PT_JPL, DisALEXI and geeSEBAL). METEVI2 was then evaluated with measured ETa from four wheat fields (2017–2018). Results indicated that the monthly ETa variations for METEVI2 and OpenET models were comparable, though of varying magnitudes. On average, METEVI2 had the lowest difference rate from the average observed ETa with 17 mm underestimation, while SIMS had the highest difference rate (82 mm). Findings show that METEVI2 is a cost-effective ETa mapping tool in drylands to track crop water use. Future studies should test METEVI2’s applicability to croplands in more humid regions.

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