Drought Monitoring Based on Vegetation Type and Reanalysis Data in Korea

Droughts affect economic, social, and environmental aspects in regions such as the Korean Peninsula, where more than 70% of the area comprises forests; hence, their monitoring is imperative. Despite the many indices and methodologies developed for monitoring, diagnosing droughts using reanalysis dat...

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Main Authors: Seoyeon Lee, Seung-Jae Lee, Keunchang Jang, Jung-Hwa Chun
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-01-01
Series:Atmosphere
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4433/12/2/170
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spelling doaj-ae7b9643f2be41759876727cbd4d5e062021-01-29T00:04:41ZengMDPI AGAtmosphere2073-44332021-01-011217017010.3390/atmos12020170Drought Monitoring Based on Vegetation Type and Reanalysis Data in KoreaSeoyeon Lee0Seung-Jae Lee1Keunchang Jang2Jung-Hwa Chun3National Center for AgroMeteorology, Seoul 08826, KoreaNational Center for AgroMeteorology, Seoul 08826, KoreaNational Institute of Forest Science, Seoul 02455, KoreaNational Institute of Forest Science, Seoul 02455, KoreaDroughts affect economic, social, and environmental aspects in regions such as the Korean Peninsula, where more than 70% of the area comprises forests; hence, their monitoring is imperative. Despite the many indices and methodologies developed for monitoring, diagnosing droughts using reanalysis data is challenging as the data are characterized by low resolution and simplified vegetation classification. This study utilized a recently released ERA5 reanalysis dataset and its vegetation type information to derive indices that represent meteorological drought. Furthermore, their accuracy in South Korea, based on observation data, was evaluated. The spatio-temporal variability of droughts was analyzed using various factor and correlation analysis methods considering different atmospheric variables and soil moisture. The validity of the method was verified by comparing the observed and obtained data. Soil moisture in the first and second soil layers was sensitive to droughts in low-vegetation areas, thus requiring relatively frequent monitoring of precipitation and evapotranspiration near the topsoil. High-vegetation areas were most affected in the third layers one month after the drought. Hence, forest drought monitoring should consider precipitation, evapotranspiration, and runoff one month in advance. The results obtained herein can be used for forest drought monitoring one month before its occurrence.https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4433/12/2/170droughtvegetation typereanalysisERA5drought indices
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Seoyeon Lee
Seung-Jae Lee
Keunchang Jang
Jung-Hwa Chun
spellingShingle Seoyeon Lee
Seung-Jae Lee
Keunchang Jang
Jung-Hwa Chun
Drought Monitoring Based on Vegetation Type and Reanalysis Data in Korea
Atmosphere
drought
vegetation type
reanalysis
ERA5
drought indices
author_facet Seoyeon Lee
Seung-Jae Lee
Keunchang Jang
Jung-Hwa Chun
author_sort Seoyeon Lee
title Drought Monitoring Based on Vegetation Type and Reanalysis Data in Korea
title_short Drought Monitoring Based on Vegetation Type and Reanalysis Data in Korea
title_full Drought Monitoring Based on Vegetation Type and Reanalysis Data in Korea
title_fullStr Drought Monitoring Based on Vegetation Type and Reanalysis Data in Korea
title_full_unstemmed Drought Monitoring Based on Vegetation Type and Reanalysis Data in Korea
title_sort drought monitoring based on vegetation type and reanalysis data in korea
publisher MDPI AG
series Atmosphere
issn 2073-4433
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Droughts affect economic, social, and environmental aspects in regions such as the Korean Peninsula, where more than 70% of the area comprises forests; hence, their monitoring is imperative. Despite the many indices and methodologies developed for monitoring, diagnosing droughts using reanalysis data is challenging as the data are characterized by low resolution and simplified vegetation classification. This study utilized a recently released ERA5 reanalysis dataset and its vegetation type information to derive indices that represent meteorological drought. Furthermore, their accuracy in South Korea, based on observation data, was evaluated. The spatio-temporal variability of droughts was analyzed using various factor and correlation analysis methods considering different atmospheric variables and soil moisture. The validity of the method was verified by comparing the observed and obtained data. Soil moisture in the first and second soil layers was sensitive to droughts in low-vegetation areas, thus requiring relatively frequent monitoring of precipitation and evapotranspiration near the topsoil. High-vegetation areas were most affected in the third layers one month after the drought. Hence, forest drought monitoring should consider precipitation, evapotranspiration, and runoff one month in advance. The results obtained herein can be used for forest drought monitoring one month before its occurrence.
topic drought
vegetation type
reanalysis
ERA5
drought indices
url https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4433/12/2/170
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AT seungjaelee droughtmonitoringbasedonvegetationtypeandreanalysisdatainkorea
AT keunchangjang droughtmonitoringbasedonvegetationtypeandreanalysisdatainkorea
AT junghwachun droughtmonitoringbasedonvegetationtypeandreanalysisdatainkorea
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