Varying applicability of four different satellite-derived soil moisture products to global gridded crop model evaluation

Research output: Contribution to journalResearch articleContributedpeer-review

Contributors

  • Toru Sakai - , National Agriculture and Food Research Organization (Author)
  • Toshichika Iizumi - , National Agriculture and Food Research Organization (Author)
  • Masashi Okada - , National Agriculture and Food Research Organization (Author)
  • Motoki Nishimori - , National Agriculture and Food Research Organization (Author)
  • Thomas Grünwald - , Chair of Meteorology, Chair of Meteorology (Author)
  • John Prueger - , United States Department of Agriculture (Author)
  • Alessandro Cescatti - , European Commission Joint Research Centre Institute (Author)
  • Wolfgang Korres - , University of Cologne (Author)
  • Marius Schmidt - , Institute of Bio- and Geosciences Agrosphere (Author)
  • Arnaud Carrara - , Mediterranean Center for Environmental Studies (CEAM) (Author)
  • Benjamin Loubet - , INRAE - National Institute of Agricultural Research (Author)
  • Eric Ceschia - , Centre national d'études spatiales (Author)

Abstract

Satellite-derived daily surface soil moisture products have been increasingly available, but their applicability to global gridded crop model (GGCM) evaluation is unclear. This study compares four different soil moisture products with the flux tower site observation at 18 cropland sites across the world where either of maize, soybean, rice and wheat is grown. These products include the first and second versions of Climate Change Initiative Soil Moisture (CCISM-1 and CCISM-2) datasets distributed by the European Space Agency and two different AMSR-E (Advanced Microwave Scanning Radiometer–Earth Observing System)-derived soil moisture datasets, separately provided by the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (AMSRE-J) and U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Administration (AMSRE-N). The comparison demonstrates varying reliability of these products in representing major characteristics of temporal pattern of cropland soil moisture by product and crop. Possible reasons for the varying reliability include the differences in sensors, algorithms, bands and criteria used when estimating soil moisture. Both the CCISM-1 and CCISM-2 products appear the most reliable for soybean- and wheat-growing area. However, the percentage of valid data of these products is always lower than other products due to relatively strict criteria when merging data derived from multiple sources, although the CCISM-2 product has much more data with valid retrievals than the CCISM-1 product. The reliability of the AMSRE-J product is the highest for maize- and rice-growing areas and comparable to or slightly lower than the CCISM products for soybean- and wheat-growing areas. The AMSRE-N is the least reliable in most location-crop combinations. The reliability of the products for rice-growing area is far lower than that of other upland crops likely due to the extensive use of irrigation and patch distribution of rice paddy in the area examined here. We conclude that the CCISM-1, CCISM-2 and AMSRE-J products are applicable to GGCM evaluation, while the AMSRE-N product is not. However, we encourage users to integrate these products with in situ soil moisture data especially when GGCMs simulations for rice are evaluated.

Details

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)51-60
Number of pages10
JournalInternational Journal of Applied Earth Observation and Geoinformation
Volume48
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jun 2016
Peer-reviewedYes

External IDs

ORCID /0000-0003-2263-0073/work/163765982

Keywords

Sustainable Development Goals

Keywords

  • Cropland, Flux tower observation, Intercomparison, Satellite remote sensing, Soil moisture