Estimating Forest Ecosystem Evapotranspiration at Multiple Temporal Scales With a Dimension Analysis Approach1 |
| |
Authors: | Guoyi Zhou Ge Sun Xu Wang Chuanyan Zhou Steven G. McNulty James M. Vose Devendra M. Amatya |
| |
Affiliation: | 1. Respectively, (Zhou, Zhou), Professor and Assistant Professor, South China Botanical Garden, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Leyiju, Tianhe District, Guangzhou 510650, China;2. (Sun, McNulty), Research Hydrologist and Research Ecologist, Southern Global Change Program, USDA Forest Service, 920 Main Campus Drive, Venture Center II, Suite 300, Raleigh, North Carolina 27606;3. (Wang), Assistant Professor, College of Environment and Plant Protection, South China University of Tropical Agriculture, Danzhou 571737, China;4. (Vose), Research Ecologist, Coweeta Hydrologic Laboratory, USDA Forest Service, 3160 Coweeta Lab Road, Otto, North Carolina 28763;5. (Amatya), Research Hydrologist, Center for Forested Wetland Research, USDA Forest Service, 2730 Savannah Highway, Charleston, South Carolina 29414 |
| |
Abstract: | Abstract: It is critical that evapotranspiration (ET) be quantified accurately so that scientists can evaluate the effects of land management and global change on water availability, streamflow, nutrient and sediment loading, and ecosystem productivity in watersheds. The objective of this study was to derive a new semi‐empirical ET modeled using a dimension analysis method that could be used to estimate forest ET effectively at multiple temporal scales. The model developed describes ET as a function of water availability for evaporation and transpiration, potential ET demand, air humidity, and land surface characteristics. The model was tested with long‐term hydrometeorological data from five research sites with distinct forest hydrology in the United States and China. Averaged simulation error for daily ET was within 0.5 mm/day. The annual ET at each of the five study sites were within 7% of measured values. Results suggest that the model can accurately capture the temporal dynamics of ET in forest ecosystems at daily, monthly, and annual scales. The model is climate‐driven and is sensitive to topography and vegetation characteristics and thus has potential to be used to examine the compounding hydrologic responses to land cover and climate changes at multiple temporal scales. |
| |
Keywords: | dimension analysis evapotranspiration empirical modeling forest hydrology water balance |
|
|