Publications

Zhang, LL; Yao, YJ; Wang, ZQ; Jia, K; Zhang, XT; Zhang, YH; Wang, XY; Xu, J; Chen, XW (2017). Satellite-Derived Spatiotemporal Variations in Evapotranspiration over Northeast China during 1982-2010. REMOTE SENSING, 9(11), 1140.

Abstract
Evapotranspiration (ET) is a critical process for the climate system and water cycles. However, the spatiotemporal variations in terrestrial ET over Northeast China over the past three decades calculated from sparse meteorological point-based data remain large uncertain. In this paper, a recently proposed modified satellite-based Priestley-Taylor (MS-PT) algorithm was applied to estimate ET of Northeast China during 1982-2010. Validation results show that the square of the correlation coefficients (R-2) for the six flux tower sites varies from 0.55 to 0.88 (p < 0.01), and the mean root mean square error (RMSE) is 0.92 mm/d. The ET estimated by MS-PT has an annual mean of 441.14 +/- 18 mm/year in Northeast China, with a decreasing trend from southeast coast to northwest inland. The ET also shows in both annual and seasonal linear trends over Northeast China during 1982-2010, although this trend seems to have ceased after 1998, which increased on average by 12.3 mm per decade pre-1998 (p < 0.1) and decreased with large interannual fluctuations post-1998. Importantly, our analysis on ET trends highlights a large difference from previous studies that the change of potential evapotranspiration (PET) plays a key role for the change of ET over Northeast China. Only in the western part of Northeast China does precipitation appear to be a major controlling influence on ET.

DOI:
10.3390/rs9111140

ISSN:
2072-4292