Water Loss to the Atmosphere over the Tibetan Plateau Based on Remote Sensing Evapotranspiration Datasets

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Abstract

In the Tibetan Plateau (TP) region, the foreseeable increase in air temperature may have profound and complex effects on the local hydrological cycle, and is likely to increase water loss from the land surface to the atmosphere through evapotranspiration (ET). Quantifying ET and its regulatory mechanisms are major challenges for understanding the water cycle and land-atmosphere interactions in the TP region. We evaluated the performance of several Earth observation-based ET datasets in the TP region, and explored the spatiotemporal variation of ET in the same region. The accuracy of different global ET datasets was evaluated, and ETMonitor and PML-V2 provide the best accuracy with overall high correlation, low bias, and low root mean square error. ETMonitor ET is also the only product with both high spatial (~1 km) and temporal (daily) resolution. ETMonitor ET may reflect the effect of mountain topography on ET better than other global products, i.e., ET values are higher in the humid valleys with denser vegetation cover and higher soil moisture, and ET values are lower on the mountain slopes at higher elevations with less vegetation cover and colder climate. Other ET products failed to capture the spatial patterns of ET in the mountainous regions, and this suggests that the spatial resolution is not the only dominant factor leading to the poorer performance of these ET products in the mountain regions of the TP. The results show that multi-year average ET is 339 mm/yr in the TP region during 2000-2021, which accounts for about 51% of the total precipitation in the TP region. From 2000 to 2021, ET over the Tibetan Plateau shows an overall increasing trend with large spatial variability.

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