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The effect of assimilating satellite-derived soil moisture data in SiBCASA on simulated carbon fluxes in Boreal Eurasia

Authors :
M. K. van der Molen
R. A. M. de Jeu
W. Wagner
I. R. van der Velde
P. Kolari
J. Kurbatova
A. Varlagin
T. C. Maximov
A. V. Kononov
T. Ohta
A. Kotani
M. C. Krol
W. Peters
Source :
Hydrology and Earth System Sciences, Vol 20, Iss 2, Pp 605-624 (2016)
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Copernicus Publications, 2016.

Abstract

Boreal Eurasia is a region where the interaction between droughts and the carbon cycle may have significant impacts on the global carbon cycle. Yet the region is extremely data sparse with respect to meteorology, soil moisture, and carbon fluxes as compared to e.g. Europe. To better constrain our vegetation model SiBCASA, we increase data usage by assimilating two streams of satellite-derived soil moisture. We study whether the assimilation improved SiBCASA's soil moisture and its effect on the simulated carbon fluxes. By comparing to unique in situ soil moisture observations, we show that the passive microwave soil moisture product did not improve the soil moisture simulated by SiBCASA, but the active data seem promising in some aspects. The match between SiBCASA and ASCAT soil moisture is best in the summer months over low vegetation. Nevertheless, ASCAT failed to detect the major droughts occurring between 2007 and 2013. The performance of ASCAT soil moisture seems to be particularly sensitive to ponding, rather than to biomass. The effect on the simulated carbon fluxes is large, 5–10 % on annual GPP and TER, tens of percent on local NEE, and 2 % on area-integrated NEE, which is the same order of magnitude as the inter-annual variations. Consequently, this study shows that assimilation of satellite-derived soil moisture has potentially large impacts, while at the same time further research is needed to understand under which conditions the satellite-derived soil moisture improves the simulated soil moisture.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10275606 and 16077938
Volume :
20
Issue :
2
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Hydrology and Earth System Sciences
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.327f11db1a4486b717ae9c9fbb6c2c
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5194/hess-20-605-2016