In the context of evaluating the occurrence of drought events over Europe, soil moisture maps provide an invaluable resource to quantify the effects of rainfall deficits on vegetated lands. Spatially distributed models represent one of the main options, alongside satellite remote sensing, to successfully monitor this quantity over large areas in a cost effective way. This work has the double aim of: (i) intercomparing three soil moisture outputs obtained by different land-surface models (LISFOOD, CLM and TESSEL) through long (at least 6. years of data between 2001 and 2011) in-situ measured datastreams, and (ii) quantifying the added value of combining the estimates of these three models by means of a simple ensemble approach. Generally, the three models return similar soil moisture anomalies over most of Europe, with few notable exceptions during summer in Mediterranean regions. The comparison with in-situ data suggests no substantial differences among the models, with LISFLOOD slightly outperforming the other two in terms of correlation as also supported by a pairwise comparison. The combined soil moisture anomalies obtained via the ensemble-mean approach are characterized by an increase of both the correlation and the accuracy in retrieving extreme events compared to the single models; however, the number of observed extreme events actually captured by the ensemble model does not increase significantly if compared to the single models. Overall, the ensemble model results are skillful, with an all site average skill score of about 0.4.

On the value of combining different modelled soil moisture products for European drought monitoring

Cammalleri C.;
2015-01-01

Abstract

In the context of evaluating the occurrence of drought events over Europe, soil moisture maps provide an invaluable resource to quantify the effects of rainfall deficits on vegetated lands. Spatially distributed models represent one of the main options, alongside satellite remote sensing, to successfully monitor this quantity over large areas in a cost effective way. This work has the double aim of: (i) intercomparing three soil moisture outputs obtained by different land-surface models (LISFOOD, CLM and TESSEL) through long (at least 6. years of data between 2001 and 2011) in-situ measured datastreams, and (ii) quantifying the added value of combining the estimates of these three models by means of a simple ensemble approach. Generally, the three models return similar soil moisture anomalies over most of Europe, with few notable exceptions during summer in Mediterranean regions. The comparison with in-situ data suggests no substantial differences among the models, with LISFLOOD slightly outperforming the other two in terms of correlation as also supported by a pairwise comparison. The combined soil moisture anomalies obtained via the ensemble-mean approach are characterized by an increase of both the correlation and the accuracy in retrieving extreme events compared to the single models; however, the number of observed extreme events actually captured by the ensemble model does not increase significantly if compared to the single models. Overall, the ensemble model results are skillful, with an all site average skill score of about 0.4.
2015
Agricultural drought
Land-surface models
Soil moisture
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11311/1223781
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