“…Hence, the selected soil moisture-based approach showed an acceptable performance in terms of discharges, presenting a negligible decrease in the validation period (∆NSE = 0.1) and greater sensitivity to the spatio-temporal variables' spatial representation.Currently there is a high availability of satellite data, almost in real time, with sufficient spatio-temporal resolutions (30 m-25 km) for ecohydrology in most cases and with a spatial distribution covering the entire earth. Among the sources of satellite information that can be used in ecohydrology, the following stand out: real evapotranspiration [19][20][21][22], land surface temperature [23,24], different vegetation indices [25][26][27], near-surface soil moisture (hereafter SM), [28][29][30][31][32] and more recently total water storage anomaly [33].Soil moisture plays a key role in the hydrological cycle, due to its influence on many processes that directly or indirectly affect the water balance, such as: vegetation growth, hydraulic properties of the ground, evapotranspiration, runoff generation and the processes of infiltration and deep percolation [13,30,[34][35][36][37]. Despite their importance, SM in-situ measurements are still uncommon in time and space [38,39].…”