2017
DOI: 10.3390/rs9010046
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Evaluation of Landsat-Based METRIC Modeling to Provide High-Spatial Resolution Evapotranspiration Estimates for Amazonian Forests

Abstract: While forest evapotranspiration (ET) dynamics in the Amazon have been studied both as point estimates using flux towers, as well as spatially coarse surfaces using satellite data, higher resolution (e.g., 30 m resolution) ET estimates are necessary to address finer spatial variability associated with forest biophysical characteristics and their changes by natural and human impacts. The objective of this study is to evaluate the potential of the Landsat-based METRIC (Mapping Evapotranspiration at high Resolutio… Show more

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Cited by 47 publications
(41 citation statements)
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“…We must also consider that during the harvest season there may be spectral mixing of harvested areas and sugarcane crop within the MODIS pixel ( Figure S5 on the Supplementary Material). Moreover, for taller vegetation (as woody savanna), deviations in estimated albedo may occur in situations where the sun is not at its zenith, which causes the mixing of sunlit and shaded areas in the same pixel, particularly in the winter months, when the solar zenith angle is higher [59].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…We must also consider that during the harvest season there may be spectral mixing of harvested areas and sugarcane crop within the MODIS pixel ( Figure S5 on the Supplementary Material). Moreover, for taller vegetation (as woody savanna), deviations in estimated albedo may occur in situations where the sun is not at its zenith, which causes the mixing of sunlit and shaded areas in the same pixel, particularly in the winter months, when the solar zenith angle is higher [59].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…An adjustment factor of 1.05 is typically used to reflect the actual evaporation amount at this anchor point. For a hot pixel, a non-vegetated agricultural area is selected, and a bare soil evaporation model, such as that presented by Reference [22], can be used to establish the adjustment factor which accounts for the residual soil evaporation from antecedent rainfall [59].…”
Section: Metric Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This will automatically result in disagreement between STIC1.2 and observed ET. Nevertheless, the performance of STIC1.2 in forest ecosystems is encouraging, given the uncertainties associated with more complex SEB models that use MOST to parameterize the turbulent mixing in tall canopies (Finnigan et al, 2009;Garratt, 1978;Harman and Finnigan, 2007) that could induce substantial biases in estimated fluxes (Wagle et al, 2017;Numata et al, 2017;Bhattarai et 25 al., 2016) Performance intercomparison of STIC1.2 with SEBS and MOD16 indicated overall low statistical errors for STIC1.2, and better agreement than SEBS and MOD16 with observed ET values. The principal differences between STIC1.2 and SEBS (as evident from Fig.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…METRIC is a Landsat imagery-based processing model designed to produce high resolution (30 m) ET maps for focused regions less than a few hundred kilometers across [10] and has been widely used over multiple land use types [11,[31][32][33][34]. Unlike other RSEB models, METRIC has the advantage of incorporating reference ET from measured weather data for determining the ET conditions at the cold and hot pixel calibration points and for extrapolation of instantaneous to 24-h ET to account for regional advection effects with expected higher accuracy [10].…”
Section: Metric Evapotranspirationmentioning
confidence: 99%