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Satellite-based Water Use Dynamics Using Historical Landsat Data (1984-2014) in the Southwestern United States

Dates

Publication Date

Citation

Senay, G.B., Schauer, Matthew, Friedrichs, MacKenzie, Velpuri, N.M., and Singh, R.K., 2017, Satellite-based Water Use Dynamics Using Historical Landsat Data (1984-2014) in the Southwestern United States: U.S. Geological Survey data release, https://doi.org/10.5066/F7DF6PDR.

Summary

Historical (1984-2014) Landsat-based ET maps were generated for Palo Verde Irrigation District (PVID) and eight other sub-basins in parts of Middle and Lower Central Valley, California. A total of 3,396 Landsat images were processed using the Operational Simplified Surface Energy balance (SSEBop) model that integrates weather and remotely sensed images to estimate monthly and annual ET within the study areas over the 31 years. Model output evaluation and validation using gridded-flux data and water balance ET approaches indicated relatively strong association between SSEBop ET and validation datasets. Historical trend analysis of seven agro-hydrologic variables were done using the Seasonal Mann-Kendall test.

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Attached Files

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Figure1.zip
“Study area details”
8.76 KB application/zip
Figure2.zip
“Seasonality of c factor”
18.42 KB application/zip
Figure3.zip
“Comparison of monthly ET”
16.1 KB application/zip
Figure4.zip
“Comparison of annual ET”
4.34 KB application/zip
Figure5.zip
“Median annual ET estimates of PVID”
67.95 MB application/zip

“Median annual ET estimates for the Middle and Lower Central Valley”
2.51 GB application/zip
Figure7.zip
“Annual comparison of all the parameters”
6.31 KB application/zip
Figure8.zip
“Seasonality of all the parameters”
5.25 KB application/zip
Figure9.zip
“Time-series estimates in PVID water use”
4.31 KB application/zip
Historical_ET_FGDC.xml
Original FGDC Metadata

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5.73 KB application/fgdc+xml

Material Request Instructions

Seasonal and temporal evapotranspiration was computed using the Operational Simplified Surface Energy Balance (SSEBop) model.

Purpose

This study has many applications in planning water resource allocation, managing water rights, sustaining agricultural production, and quantifying impacts of climate and land use/land cover changes on water resources.

Rights

United States Federal Government

Additional Information

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Type Scheme Key
DOI https://www.sciencebase.gov/vocab/category/item/identifier doi:10.5066/F7DF6PDR

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