On the Role of Land Surface Temperature as Proxy of Soil Moisture Status for Drought Monitoring in Europe

Remotely sensed Land Surface Temperature (LST) represents a valuable source of data for a simple modelling of the dynamic of soil moisture (SM) over large areas. In this paper we evaluated the capability of LST monthly anomalies, derived from the MOD11C3 standard product, to capture the SM dynamic a...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Carmelo Cammalleri, Jürgen Vogt
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2015-12-01
Series:Remote Sensing
Subjects:
LST
EDO
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/7/12/15857
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spelling doaj-cd95e504fd4f4b1a9f70bfe153c2e9d72020-11-24T22:31:16ZengMDPI AGRemote Sensing2072-42922015-12-01712168491686410.3390/rs71215857rs71215857On the Role of Land Surface Temperature as Proxy of Soil Moisture Status for Drought Monitoring in EuropeCarmelo Cammalleri0Jürgen Vogt1European Commission, Joint Research Centre, via E. Fermi 2749, I-21027 Ispra, ItalyEuropean Commission, Joint Research Centre, via E. Fermi 2749, I-21027 Ispra, ItalyRemotely sensed Land Surface Temperature (LST) represents a valuable source of data for a simple modelling of the dynamic of soil moisture (SM) over large areas. In this paper we evaluated the capability of LST monthly anomalies, derived from the MOD11C3 standard product, to capture the SM dynamic as modelled over Europe by means of an ensemble of three land surface models. The direct use of LST as proxy of SM outperformed other LST-derived quantities, such as surface-to-air temperature gradient and day-night temperature variations, returning significant correlation values over the whole domain. LST performed better over Southern Europe compared to the Northern part of the domain, with the best results over areas characterized by water-limited conditions and moderate stress. Additionally, the analysis of the contingency matrix shows that the LST model is skillful in capturing extreme dry SM events, and it also has a good overall capability to correctly detect the dry events in 66% of the cases, with an average probability of false alarm of about 30%. Overall, the use of LST anomalies seems a promising starting point for a reliable modelling of the SM dynamic with a minimum amount of information. Even if the adopted approach is simple, the results are encouraging for a practical use of LST in an operational drought monitoring system over the study area.http://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/7/12/15857MODISLSTecosystem droughtEDOsoil moisture
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Carmelo Cammalleri
Jürgen Vogt
spellingShingle Carmelo Cammalleri
Jürgen Vogt
On the Role of Land Surface Temperature as Proxy of Soil Moisture Status for Drought Monitoring in Europe
Remote Sensing
MODIS
LST
ecosystem drought
EDO
soil moisture
author_facet Carmelo Cammalleri
Jürgen Vogt
author_sort Carmelo Cammalleri
title On the Role of Land Surface Temperature as Proxy of Soil Moisture Status for Drought Monitoring in Europe
title_short On the Role of Land Surface Temperature as Proxy of Soil Moisture Status for Drought Monitoring in Europe
title_full On the Role of Land Surface Temperature as Proxy of Soil Moisture Status for Drought Monitoring in Europe
title_fullStr On the Role of Land Surface Temperature as Proxy of Soil Moisture Status for Drought Monitoring in Europe
title_full_unstemmed On the Role of Land Surface Temperature as Proxy of Soil Moisture Status for Drought Monitoring in Europe
title_sort on the role of land surface temperature as proxy of soil moisture status for drought monitoring in europe
publisher MDPI AG
series Remote Sensing
issn 2072-4292
publishDate 2015-12-01
description Remotely sensed Land Surface Temperature (LST) represents a valuable source of data for a simple modelling of the dynamic of soil moisture (SM) over large areas. In this paper we evaluated the capability of LST monthly anomalies, derived from the MOD11C3 standard product, to capture the SM dynamic as modelled over Europe by means of an ensemble of three land surface models. The direct use of LST as proxy of SM outperformed other LST-derived quantities, such as surface-to-air temperature gradient and day-night temperature variations, returning significant correlation values over the whole domain. LST performed better over Southern Europe compared to the Northern part of the domain, with the best results over areas characterized by water-limited conditions and moderate stress. Additionally, the analysis of the contingency matrix shows that the LST model is skillful in capturing extreme dry SM events, and it also has a good overall capability to correctly detect the dry events in 66% of the cases, with an average probability of false alarm of about 30%. Overall, the use of LST anomalies seems a promising starting point for a reliable modelling of the SM dynamic with a minimum amount of information. Even if the adopted approach is simple, the results are encouraging for a practical use of LST in an operational drought monitoring system over the study area.
topic MODIS
LST
ecosystem drought
EDO
soil moisture
url http://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/7/12/15857
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