2016
DOI: 10.1002/2016wr018846
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Monitoring groundwater storage changes in complex basement aquifers: An evaluation of the GRACE satellites over East Africa

Abstract: Although the use of the Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) satellites to monitor groundwater storage changes has become commonplace, our evaluation suggests that careful processing of the GRACE data is necessary to extract a representative signal especially in regions with significant surface water storage (i.e., lakes/reservoirs). In our study, we use cautiously processed data sets, including GRACE, lake altimetry, and model soil moisture, to reduce scaling factor bias and compare GRACE‐derived g… Show more

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Cited by 64 publications
(53 citation statements)
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References 137 publications
(230 reference statements)
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“…This inconsistency suggests that the "true" GRACE TWS signal is weakened during processing and that the combined SWS + SMS signal is greater than TWS, mathematically resulting in a positive estimate of GWS. In contrast to the assertions of Nanteza et al (2016), applying the GRCTellus CSR solution, we find that this uncertainty prevents robust resolution of GWS from GRACE TWS in these complex hydrogeological environments of eastern Africa. Despite substantial efforts to improve groundwaterlevel monitoring and to collate existing groundwater-level records across Africa, we recognize that understanding of in situ GWS remains greatly constrained by limitations in current observational networks and records.…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 83%
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“…This inconsistency suggests that the "true" GRACE TWS signal is weakened during processing and that the combined SWS + SMS signal is greater than TWS, mathematically resulting in a positive estimate of GWS. In contrast to the assertions of Nanteza et al (2016), applying the GRCTellus CSR solution, we find that this uncertainty prevents robust resolution of GWS from GRACE TWS in these complex hydrogeological environments of eastern Africa. Despite substantial efforts to improve groundwaterlevel monitoring and to collate existing groundwater-level records across Africa, we recognize that understanding of in situ GWS remains greatly constrained by limitations in current observational networks and records.…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 83%
“…For example, GRCTellus underrepresents greatly (63 %) the reduction of 83 km 3 in bottom-up TWS, whereas GRGS and JPLMascons GRACE products underrepresent this by 17 and 4 % respectively. Previous studies in the Upper Nile Basin have relied upon a single GRACE product such as GRCTellus CSR (Nanteza et al, 2016) and GFZ (version (RL04) (Awange et al, 2014) without considering uncertainty in the seasonal amplitude of TWS associated with the processing of different GRACE products. Over a longer period (2003)(2004)(2005)(2006)(2007)(2008)(2009)(2010)(2011)(2012) in the Upper Nile Basin, all GRACE products correlate well with bottom-up TWS but, similar to the unintended experiment, variability in amplitude is considerable (Fig.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Irrigation and other water use such as drinking water in the region almost entirely draws water from sources originating from groundwater [42,47]. With precipitation being a significant driver of the water storage behavior of the region encompassing our study areas [83], climate change scenarios for the region suggest an increase in water stress in the future. In addition, interannual high precipitation events associated with large-scale circulations (i.e., IOD, ENSO) will play increasingly important roles in mitigating accumulated water storage deficits [83].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%