Data release for Remotely Sensed Surface Water Storage Shows Distinct Patterns from SWAT-Simulated Data
收藏U.S. Geological Survey2026-04-23 收录
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https://www.sciencebase.gov/catalog/item/6785551fd34ec3ce63796a66
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Understanding and projecting the downstream benefits of terrestrial surface water storage (volumetric water stored in lakes and wetlands, SWstorage) requires watershed hydrologic models. Use of external datasets to calibrate and validate modeled SWstorage dynamics remains uncommon, particularly across major river basins. Here, we: (1) developed and assessed the utility of a novel remote sensing-based (RS) SWstorage approach for verifying watershed-model SWstorage estimates, (2) compared average modeled and RS SWstorage volume across the landscape, and (3) compared variability in modeled and RS SWstorage through time. We used biweekly observations of SWstorage informed by Sentinel-1 and -2 (RS SWstorage), with Soil and Water Assessment Tool (SWAT) model simulations (SWAT SWstorage) across the ~450,000 km2 Upper Mississippi River Basin. We found that RS SWstorage was, on average, lower than SWAT SWstorage in tile-drained agricultural regions where static Digital Elevation Model (DEM)-generated depressions used in the SWAT model often did not contain RS surface water. Conversely, RS SWstorage was higher than SWAT SWstorage in wetland-rich regions where surface water was shallower than DEM vertical accuracy. In modeled subbasins where DEM-generated maximum SWstorage capacity was low relative to SWAT SWstorage volumes, SWAT SWstorage was effectively capped and unable to vary through time, whereas RS SWstorage in the same subbasins continued to vary. Thus, RS SWstorage allows for a more accurate representation of where, when, and how much water is on the landscape. This finding is useful for informing watershed model initial conditions and highlights the potential for RS to be used in SWstorage calibration or data assimilation.
提供机构:
United States Geological Survey; University of Texas at Arlington; USEPA, Office of Research and Development



