Constraining Plant Hydraulics With Microwave Radiometry in a Land Surface Model: Impacts of Temporal Resolution
Abstract
Vegetation water content (VWC) plays a key role in transpiration, plant mortality, and wildfire risk. Although land surface models now often contain plant hydraulics schemes, there are few direct VWC measurements to constrain these models at global scale. One proposed solution to this data gap is passive microwave remote sensing, which is sensitive to temporal changes in VWC. Here, we test that approach by using synthetic microwave observations to constrain VWC and surface soil moisture within the Climate Modeling Alliance Land model. We further investigate the possible utility of sub-daily observations of VWC, which could be obtained through a satellite in geostationary orbit or combinations of multiple satellites. These high-temporal-resolution observations could allow for improved determination of ecosystem parameters, carbon and water fluxes, and subsurface hydraulics, relative to the currently available twice-daily sun-synchronous observational patterns. We find that incorporating observations at four different times in the diurnal cycle (such as could be available from two sun-synchronous satellites) provides a significantly better constraint on water and carbon fluxes than twice-daily observations do. For example, the root mean square error of projected evapotranspiration and gross primary productivity during drought periods was reduced by approximately 40%, when using four-times-daily relative to twice-daily observations. Adding hourly observations of the entire diurnal cycle did not further improve the inferred parameters and fluxes. Our comparison of observational strategies may be informative in the design of future satellite missions to study plant hydraulics, as well as when using existing remotely sensed data to study vegetation water stress response.
Copyright and License
© 2023. The Authors. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Acknowledgement
NH is supported by a Future Investigators in NASA Earth and Space Science and Technology (FINESST) Grant (80NSSC20K1620) from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). NH, AGK, JDW, and CF are supported by the NASA Carbon Cycle Science program (80NSSC21K1712). NH and AGK are also supported by NSF DEB-1942133. YW and CF gratefully acknowledge the generous support of Eric and Wendy Schmidt (by recommendation of the Schmidt Futures initiative) and the Heising-Simons Foundation.
Data Availability
The following Zenodo repository contains retrieved posterior parameter distributions, and posterior quantiles for the retrieved time series of model states and fluxes: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7757684.
Code Availability
All code used in this project is available in a GitHub repository: https://github.com/natan-holtzman/CliMa_Microwave.
The repository includes source code for our version of the CliMA Land model, meteorological data used as model forcing, MCMC code for the retrieval algorithm, and scripts to analyze the model outputs and produce the figures in this paper.
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Additional details
- ISSN
- 1944-7973
- National Aeronautics and Space Administration
- NASA Earth and Space Science and Technology Fellowship 80NSSC20K1620
- National Aeronautics and Space Administration
- 80NSSC21K1712
- National Science Foundation
- DEB‐1942133
- Schmidt Family Foundation
- Schmidt Futures
- Heising-Simons Foundation
- Caltech groups
- Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences