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Assessing the accuracy of OpenET satellite-based evapotranspiration data to support water resource and land management applications

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John M. Volk, Justin L Huntington, Forrest L. Melton, Richard Allen, Martha Anderson, Joshua B Fisher, Ayse Kilic, Anderson Ruhoff, Gabriel B Senay, Blake Minor, Charles Morton, Thomas Ott, Lee Johnson, Bruno Comini de Andrade, Will Carrara, Conor T Doherty, Christian Dunkerly, MacKenzie O Friedrichs, Alberto Guzman, Christopher Hain, Gregory Halverson, Yanghui Kang, Kyle Knipper, Leonardo Laipelt, Samuel Ortega-Salazar, Christopher Pearson, Gabriel (Contractor) E Parrish, Adam Purdy, Peter ReVelle, Tianxin Wang, and Yun Yang, 2024-01-15, Assessing the accuracy of OpenET satellite-based evapotranspiration data to support water resource and land management applications: Nature Water.

Summary

Remotely sensed evapotranspiration (ET) data offer strong potential to support data-driven approaches for sustainable water management. However, practitioners require robust and rigorous accuracy assessments of such data. The OpenET system, which includes an ensemble of six remote sensing models, was developed to increase access to field-scale (30 m) ET data for the contiguous United States. Here we compare OpenET outputs against data from 152 in situ stations, primarily eddy covariance flux towers, deployed across the contiguous United States. Mean absolute error at cropland sites for the OpenET ensemble value is 15.8 mm per month (17% of mean observed ET), mean bias error is −5.3 mm per month (6%) and r2 is 0.9. Results for shrublands [...]

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  • National and Regional Climate Adaptation Science Centers
  • North Central CASC

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citationTypeJournal Article
journalNature Water
parts
typeDOI
valuedoi.org/10.1038/s44221-023-00181-7

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