Estimation of evapotranspiration of a salt marsh in southern South America with coupled Penman-Monteith and surface resistance models

One of the most recommended method to estimate evapotranspiration (ET) of vegetated surfaces with different soil moisture conditions is the Penman-Monteith equation (PM). Canopy and soil conditions are parameterized through the surface resistance or conductance, while the contribution of the canopy...

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Autores principales: Gassmann, M.I., Tonti, N.E., Burek, A., Pérez, C.F.
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Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_01681923_v266-267_n_p109_Gassmann
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spelling todo:paper_01681923_v266-267_n_p109_Gassmann2023-10-03T15:06:20Z Estimation of evapotranspiration of a salt marsh in southern South America with coupled Penman-Monteith and surface resistance models Gassmann, M.I. Tonti, N.E. Burek, A. Pérez, C.F. Argentina Coupled model Eddy covariance Spartina air temperature dew point eddy covariance estimation method evapotranspiration leaf area index livestock farming Penman-Monteith equation relative humidity saltmarsh soil moisture soil water solar radiation wind velocity Argentina Buenos Aires [Argentina] South America Spartina One of the most recommended method to estimate evapotranspiration (ET) of vegetated surfaces with different soil moisture conditions is the Penman-Monteith equation (PM). Canopy and soil conditions are parameterized through the surface resistance or conductance, while the contribution of the canopy to ET is measured by the canopy resistance. The study of natural ecosystems has gained interest because of its importance in water and carbon cycles. However, unlike monocultures, natural environments are composed of a mixture of species that make the estimation of ET with PM troublesome. This feature makes them suitable for ET estimation considering the contribution of both, the canopy and the soil represented by the surface resistance (rs), or the contribution of the canopy, represented by the canopy resistance (rc). This work aims to model the surface and canopy resistances using conventional meteorological, biological and pedological variables observed at a salt marsh used for livestock production in Buenos Aires province, Argentina. Twelve models (M1 to M12) based on the net solar radiation (Rn), air temperature (Ta), air relative humidity (RH), surface wind velocity (U), dew point departure (Dp), aerodynamic resistance (ra), leaf area index (LAI) and volumetric soil water content (ϑs) were obtained using two different regression methodologies. Surface resistances during daytime were calculated inverting the PM equation with ET fluxes measured with the eddy covariance method. PM-derived rs varied between 20 and 1000 s m−1, with a median of 137 s m−1. From 1620 observations, 468 were used for model calibration while 1152 for model validation. M5 and M11 with Rn, RH, ra, LAI predictor variables were the best models with 80.8 s m−1 root mean square error, 0.51 determination coefficient, 0.69 and 0.65 index of agreement, respectively. The modelled resistances allowed the estimation of latent heat fluxes with a root mean quadratic error varying from 60.7 to 69.5 W m-2. These results show the possibility to achieve rs from a minimum set of variables easily measured in the field which in turn, allows to estimate the ET of salt marsh ecosystems with scarce meteorological information. © 2018 Elsevier B.V. JOUR info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ar http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_01681923_v266-267_n_p109_Gassmann
institution Universidad de Buenos Aires
institution_str I-28
repository_str R-134
collection Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA)
topic Argentina
Coupled model
Eddy covariance
Spartina
air temperature
dew point
eddy covariance
estimation method
evapotranspiration
leaf area index
livestock farming
Penman-Monteith equation
relative humidity
saltmarsh
soil moisture
soil water
solar radiation
wind velocity
Argentina
Buenos Aires [Argentina]
South America
Spartina
spellingShingle Argentina
Coupled model
Eddy covariance
Spartina
air temperature
dew point
eddy covariance
estimation method
evapotranspiration
leaf area index
livestock farming
Penman-Monteith equation
relative humidity
saltmarsh
soil moisture
soil water
solar radiation
wind velocity
Argentina
Buenos Aires [Argentina]
South America
Spartina
Gassmann, M.I.
Tonti, N.E.
Burek, A.
Pérez, C.F.
Estimation of evapotranspiration of a salt marsh in southern South America with coupled Penman-Monteith and surface resistance models
topic_facet Argentina
Coupled model
Eddy covariance
Spartina
air temperature
dew point
eddy covariance
estimation method
evapotranspiration
leaf area index
livestock farming
Penman-Monteith equation
relative humidity
saltmarsh
soil moisture
soil water
solar radiation
wind velocity
Argentina
Buenos Aires [Argentina]
South America
Spartina
description One of the most recommended method to estimate evapotranspiration (ET) of vegetated surfaces with different soil moisture conditions is the Penman-Monteith equation (PM). Canopy and soil conditions are parameterized through the surface resistance or conductance, while the contribution of the canopy to ET is measured by the canopy resistance. The study of natural ecosystems has gained interest because of its importance in water and carbon cycles. However, unlike monocultures, natural environments are composed of a mixture of species that make the estimation of ET with PM troublesome. This feature makes them suitable for ET estimation considering the contribution of both, the canopy and the soil represented by the surface resistance (rs), or the contribution of the canopy, represented by the canopy resistance (rc). This work aims to model the surface and canopy resistances using conventional meteorological, biological and pedological variables observed at a salt marsh used for livestock production in Buenos Aires province, Argentina. Twelve models (M1 to M12) based on the net solar radiation (Rn), air temperature (Ta), air relative humidity (RH), surface wind velocity (U), dew point departure (Dp), aerodynamic resistance (ra), leaf area index (LAI) and volumetric soil water content (ϑs) were obtained using two different regression methodologies. Surface resistances during daytime were calculated inverting the PM equation with ET fluxes measured with the eddy covariance method. PM-derived rs varied between 20 and 1000 s m−1, with a median of 137 s m−1. From 1620 observations, 468 were used for model calibration while 1152 for model validation. M5 and M11 with Rn, RH, ra, LAI predictor variables were the best models with 80.8 s m−1 root mean square error, 0.51 determination coefficient, 0.69 and 0.65 index of agreement, respectively. The modelled resistances allowed the estimation of latent heat fluxes with a root mean quadratic error varying from 60.7 to 69.5 W m-2. These results show the possibility to achieve rs from a minimum set of variables easily measured in the field which in turn, allows to estimate the ET of salt marsh ecosystems with scarce meteorological information. © 2018 Elsevier B.V.
format JOUR
author Gassmann, M.I.
Tonti, N.E.
Burek, A.
Pérez, C.F.
author_facet Gassmann, M.I.
Tonti, N.E.
Burek, A.
Pérez, C.F.
author_sort Gassmann, M.I.
title Estimation of evapotranspiration of a salt marsh in southern South America with coupled Penman-Monteith and surface resistance models
title_short Estimation of evapotranspiration of a salt marsh in southern South America with coupled Penman-Monteith and surface resistance models
title_full Estimation of evapotranspiration of a salt marsh in southern South America with coupled Penman-Monteith and surface resistance models
title_fullStr Estimation of evapotranspiration of a salt marsh in southern South America with coupled Penman-Monteith and surface resistance models
title_full_unstemmed Estimation of evapotranspiration of a salt marsh in southern South America with coupled Penman-Monteith and surface resistance models
title_sort estimation of evapotranspiration of a salt marsh in southern south america with coupled penman-monteith and surface resistance models
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_01681923_v266-267_n_p109_Gassmann
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