Usefulness of Global Root Zone Soil Moisture Product for Streamflow Prediction of Ungauged Basins
Using modelling approaches to predict stream flow from ungauged basins requires new model calibration strategies and evaluation methods that are different from the existing ones. Soil moisture information plays an important role in hydrological applications in basins. Increased availability of remot...
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doaj-a79ae0c8053e4fe18ccf5bd7dee74bc02021-02-19T00:05:34ZengMDPI AGRemote Sensing2072-42922021-02-011375675610.3390/rs13040756Usefulness of Global Root Zone Soil Moisture Product for Streamflow Prediction of Ungauged BasinsJeonghyeon Choi0Jeongeun Won1Okjeong Lee2Sangdan Kim3Division of Earth Environmental System Science, Pukyong National University, Busan 48513, KoreaDivision of Earth Environmental System Science, Pukyong National University, Busan 48513, KoreaSchool of Integrated Science for Sustainable Earth & Environmental Disaster, Pukyong National University, Busan 48513, KoreaDepartment of Environmental Engineering, Pukyong National University, Busan 48513, KoreaUsing modelling approaches to predict stream flow from ungauged basins requires new model calibration strategies and evaluation methods that are different from the existing ones. Soil moisture information plays an important role in hydrological applications in basins. Increased availability of remote sensing data presents a significant opportunity to obtain the predictive performance of hydrological models (especially in ungauged basins), but there is still a limit to applying remote sensing soil moisture data directly to models. The Soil Moisture Active Passive (SMAP) satellite mission provides global soil moisture data estimated by assimilating remotely sensed brightness temperature to a land surface model. This study investigates the potential of a hydrological model calibrated using only global root zone soil moisture based on satellite observation when attempting to predict stream flow in ungauged basins. This approach's advantage is that it is particularly useful for stream flow prediction in ungauged basins since it does not require observed stream flow data to calibrate a model. The modelling experiments were carried out on upstream watersheds of two dams in South Korea with high-quality stream flow data. The resulting model outputs when calibrated using soil moisture data without observed stream flow data are particularly impressive when simulating monthly stream flows upstream of the dams, and daily stream flows also showed a satisfactory level of predictive performance. In particular, the model calibrated using soil moisture data for dry years showed better predictive performance than for wet years. The performance of the model calibrated using soil moisture data was significantly improved under low flow conditions compared to the traditional regionalization approach. Additionally, the overall stream flow was also predicted better. In addition, the uncertainty of the model calibrated using soil moisture was not much different from that of the model calibrated using observed stream flow data, and showed more robust outputs when compared to the traditional regionalization approach. These results prove that the application of the global soil moisture product for predicting stream flows in ungauged basins is promising.https://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/13/4/756hydrological model calibrationsoil moisture active passive satellite missionsoil moistureuncertaintyungauged basins |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Jeonghyeon Choi Jeongeun Won Okjeong Lee Sangdan Kim |
spellingShingle |
Jeonghyeon Choi Jeongeun Won Okjeong Lee Sangdan Kim Usefulness of Global Root Zone Soil Moisture Product for Streamflow Prediction of Ungauged Basins Remote Sensing hydrological model calibration soil moisture active passive satellite mission soil moisture uncertainty ungauged basins |
author_facet |
Jeonghyeon Choi Jeongeun Won Okjeong Lee Sangdan Kim |
author_sort |
Jeonghyeon Choi |
title |
Usefulness of Global Root Zone Soil Moisture Product for Streamflow Prediction of Ungauged Basins |
title_short |
Usefulness of Global Root Zone Soil Moisture Product for Streamflow Prediction of Ungauged Basins |
title_full |
Usefulness of Global Root Zone Soil Moisture Product for Streamflow Prediction of Ungauged Basins |
title_fullStr |
Usefulness of Global Root Zone Soil Moisture Product for Streamflow Prediction of Ungauged Basins |
title_full_unstemmed |
Usefulness of Global Root Zone Soil Moisture Product for Streamflow Prediction of Ungauged Basins |
title_sort |
usefulness of global root zone soil moisture product for streamflow prediction of ungauged basins |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Remote Sensing |
issn |
2072-4292 |
publishDate |
2021-02-01 |
description |
Using modelling approaches to predict stream flow from ungauged basins requires new model calibration strategies and evaluation methods that are different from the existing ones. Soil moisture information plays an important role in hydrological applications in basins. Increased availability of remote sensing data presents a significant opportunity to obtain the predictive performance of hydrological models (especially in ungauged basins), but there is still a limit to applying remote sensing soil moisture data directly to models. The Soil Moisture Active Passive (SMAP) satellite mission provides global soil moisture data estimated by assimilating remotely sensed brightness temperature to a land surface model. This study investigates the potential of a hydrological model calibrated using only global root zone soil moisture based on satellite observation when attempting to predict stream flow in ungauged basins. This approach's advantage is that it is particularly useful for stream flow prediction in ungauged basins since it does not require observed stream flow data to calibrate a model. The modelling experiments were carried out on upstream watersheds of two dams in South Korea with high-quality stream flow data. The resulting model outputs when calibrated using soil moisture data without observed stream flow data are particularly impressive when simulating monthly stream flows upstream of the dams, and daily stream flows also showed a satisfactory level of predictive performance. In particular, the model calibrated using soil moisture data for dry years showed better predictive performance than for wet years. The performance of the model calibrated using soil moisture data was significantly improved under low flow conditions compared to the traditional regionalization approach. Additionally, the overall stream flow was also predicted better. In addition, the uncertainty of the model calibrated using soil moisture was not much different from that of the model calibrated using observed stream flow data, and showed more robust outputs when compared to the traditional regionalization approach. These results prove that the application of the global soil moisture product for predicting stream flows in ungauged basins is promising. |
topic |
hydrological model calibration soil moisture active passive satellite mission soil moisture uncertainty ungauged basins |
url |
https://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/13/4/756 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT jeonghyeonchoi usefulnessofglobalrootzonesoilmoistureproductforstreamflowpredictionofungaugedbasins AT jeongeunwon usefulnessofglobalrootzonesoilmoistureproductforstreamflowpredictionofungaugedbasins AT okjeonglee usefulnessofglobalrootzonesoilmoistureproductforstreamflowpredictionofungaugedbasins AT sangdankim usefulnessofglobalrootzonesoilmoistureproductforstreamflowpredictionofungaugedbasins |
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