TY - JOUR A1 - Zappa, Luca A1 - Schlaffer, Stefan A1 - Brocca, Luca A1 - Vreugdenhil, Mariette A1 - Nendel, Claas A1 - Dorigo, Wouter T1 - How accurately can we retrieve irrigation timing and water amounts from (satellite) soil moisture? JF - International journal of applied earth observation and geoinformation N2 - While ensuring food security worldwide, irrigation is altering the water cycle and generating numerous environmental side effects. As detailed knowledge about the timing and the amounts of water used for irrigation over large areas is still lacking, remotely sensed soil moisture has proved potential to fill this gap. However, the spatial resolution and revisit time of current satellite products represent a major limitation to accurately estimating irrigation. This work aims to systematically quantify their impact on the retrieved irrigation information, hence assessing the value of satellite soil moisture for estimating irrigation timing and water amounts. In a real-world experiment, we modeled soil moisture using actual irrigation and meteorological data, obtained from farmers and weather stations, respectively. Modeled soil moisture was compared against various remotely sensed products differing in terms of spatio-temporal resolution to test the hypothesis that high-resolution observations can disclose the irrigation signal from individual fields while coarse-scale satellite products cannot. Then, in a synthetic experiment, we systematically investigated the effect of soil moisture spatial and temporal resolution on the accuracy of irrigation estimates. The analysis was further elaborated by considering different irrigation scenarios and by adding realistic amounts of random errors in the soil moisture time series. We show that coarse-scale remotely sensed soil moisture products achieve higher correlations with rainfed simulations, while high-resolution satellite observations agree significantly better with irrigated simulations, suggesting that high-resolution satellite soil moisture can inform on field-scale (similar to 40 ha) irrigation. A thorough analysis of the synthetic dataset showed that satisfactory results, both in terms of detection (F-score > 0.8) and quantification (Pearson's correlation > 0.8), are found for noise-free soil moisture observations either with a temporal sampling up to 3 days or if at least one-third of the pixel covers the irrigated field(s). However, irrigation water amounts are systematically underestimated for temporal samplings of more than one day, and decrease proportionally to the spatial resolution, i.e., coarsening the pixel size leads to larger irrigation underestimations. Although lower spatial and temporal resolutions decrease the detection and quantification accuracies (e.g., R between 0.6 and 1 depending on the irrigation rate and spatio-temporal resolution), random errors in the soil moisture time series have a stronger negative impact (Pearson R always smaller than 0.85). As expected, better performances are found for higher irrigation rates, i.e. when more water is supplied during an irrigation event. Despite the potentially large underestimations, our results suggest that high-resolution satellite soil moisture has the potential to track and quantify irrigation, especially over regions where large volumes of irrigation water are applied to the fields, and given that low errors affect the soil moisture observations. KW - remote sensing KW - soil moisture KW - irrigation KW - detection KW - quantification KW - sentinel-1 Y1 - 2022 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jag.2022.102979 SN - 1569-8432 SN - 1872-826X VL - 113 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Weimar, Jannis A1 - Köhli, Markus A1 - Budach, Christian A1 - Schmidt, Ulrich T1 - Large-scale boron-lined neutron detection systems as a 3He alternative for Cosmic Ray Neutron Sensing JF - Frontiers in water N2 - Cosmic-Ray neutron sensors are widely used to determine soil moisture on the hectare scale. Precise measurements, especially in the case of mobile application, demand for neutron detectors with high counting rates and high signal-to-noise ratios. For a long time Cosmic Ray Neutron Sensing (CRNS) instruments have relied on He-3 as an efficient neutron converter. Its ongoing scarcity demands for technological solutions using alternative converters, which are Li-6 and B-10. Recent developments lead to a modular neutron detector consisting of several B-10-lined proportional counter tubes, which feature high counting rates via its large surface area. The modularity allows for individual shieldings of different segments within the detector featuring the capability of gaining spectral information about the detected neutrons. This opens the possibility for active signal correction, especially useful when applied to mobile measurements, where the influence of constantly changing near-field to the overall signal should be corrected. Furthermore, the signal-to-noise ratio could be increased by combining pulse height and pulse length spectra to discriminate between neutrons and other environmental radiation. This novel detector therefore combines high-selective counting electronics with large-scale instrumentation technology. KW - CRNS KW - neutron KW - detector KW - soil moisture KW - readout electronics KW - boron-10 KW - helium-3 alternative Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.3389/frwa.2020.00016 SN - 2624-9375 VL - 2 PB - Frontiers Media CY - Lausanne ER - TY - GEN A1 - Wagner, Kathrin A1 - Oswald, Sascha A1 - Frick, Annett T1 - Multitemporal soil moisture monitoring by use of optical remote sensing data in a dike relocation area T2 - Remote Sensing for Agriculture, Ecosystems, and Hydrology XX N2 - The nature restoration project ‘Lenzener Elbtalaue’, realised from 2002 to 2011 at the river Elbe, included the first large scale dike relocation in Germany (420 ha). Its aim was to initiate the development of endangered natural wetland habitats and processes, accompanied by greater biodiversity in the former grassland dominated area. The monitoring of spatial and temporal variations of soil moisture in this dike relocation area is therefore particularly important for estimating the restoration success. The topsoil moisture monitoring from 1990 to 2017 is based on the Soil Moisture Index (SMI)1 derived with the triangle method2 by use of optical remotely sensed data: land surface temperature and Normalized Differnce Vegetation Index are calculated from Landsat 4/5/7/8 data and atmospheric corrected by use of MODIS data. Spatial and temporal soil moisture variations in the restored area of the dike relocation are compared to the agricultural and pasture area behind the new dike. Ground truth data in the dike relocation area was obtained from field measurements in October 2017 with a FDR device. Additionally, data from a TERENO soil moisture sensor network (SoilNet) and mobile cosmic ray neutron sensing (CRNS) rover measurements are compared to the results of the triangle method for a region in the Harz Mountains (Germany). The SMI time series illustrates, that the dike relocation area has become significantly wetter between 1990 and 2017, due to restructuring measurements. Whereas the SMI of the dike hinterland reflects constant and drier conditions. An influence of climate is unlikely. However, validation of the dimensionless index with ground truth measurements is very difficult, mostly due to large differences in scale. KW - soil moisture KW - time series KW - SMI KW - triangle method KW - Landsat KW - restoration Y1 - 2018 SN - 978-1-5106-2150-3 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2325319 SN - 0277-786X SN - 1996-756X VL - 10783 PB - SPIE-INT Soc Optical Engineering CY - Bellingham ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Schrön, Martin A1 - Rosolem, Rafael A1 - Köhli, Markus A1 - Piussi, L. A1 - Schröter, I. A1 - Iwema, J. A1 - Kögler, S. A1 - Oswald, Sascha A1 - Wollschläger, U. A1 - Samaniego, Luis A1 - Dietrich, Peter A1 - Zacharias, Steffen T1 - Cosmic-ray Neutron Rover Surveys of Field Soil Moisture and the Influence of Roads JF - Water resources research N2 - Measurements of root-zone soil moisture across spatial scales of tens to thousands of meters have been a challenge for many decades. The mobile application of Cosmic Ray Neutron Sensing (CRNS) is a promising approach to measure field soil moisture noninvasively by surveying large regions with a ground-based vehicle. Recently, concerns have been raised about a potentially biasing influence of local structures and roads. We employed neutron transport simulations and dedicated experiments to quantify the influence of different road types on the CRNS measurement. We found that roads introduce a substantial bias in the CRNS estimation of field soil moisture compared to off-road scenarios. However, this effect becomes insignificant at distances beyond a few meters from the road. Neutron measurements on the road could overestimate the field value by up to 40 % depending on road material, width, and the surrounding field water content. The bias could be largely removed with an analytical correction function that accounts for these parameters. Additionally, an empirical approach is proposed that can be used without prior knowledge of field soil moisture. Tests at different study sites demonstrated good agreement between road-effect corrected measurements and field soil moisture observations. However, if knowledge about the road characteristics is missing, measurements on the road could substantially reduce the accuracy of this method. Our results constitute a practical advancement of the mobile CRNS methodology, which is important for providing unbiased estimates of field-scale soil moisture to support applications in hydrology, remote sensing, and agriculture. Plain Language Summary Measurements of root-zone soil moisture across spatial scales of tens to thousands of meters have been a challenge for many decades. The mobile application of Cosmic Ray Neutron Sensing (CRNS) is a promising approach to measure field soil moisture noninvasively by surveying large regions with a ground-based vehicle. Recently, concerns have been raised about a potentially biasing influence of roads. We employed physics simulations and dedicated experiments to quantify the influence of different road types on the CRNS measurement. We found that the presence of roads biased the CRNS estimation of field soil moisture compared to nonroad scenarios. Neutron measurements could overestimate the field value by up to 40 % depending on road material, width, surrounding field water content, and distance from the road. We proposed a correction function that successfully removed this bias and works even without prior knowledge of field soil moisture. Tests at different study sites demonstrated good agreement between corrected measurements and other field soil moisture observations. Our results constitute a practical advancement of the mobile CRNS methodology, which is important for providing unbiased estimates of field-scale soil moisture to support applications in hydrology, remote sensing, and agriculture. KW - road effect KW - field-scale KW - soil moisture KW - cosmic ray neutrons KW - mobile survey KW - COSMOS rover Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1029/2017WR021719 SN - 0043-1397 SN - 1944-7973 VL - 54 IS - 9 SP - 6441 EP - 6459 PB - American Geophysical Union CY - Washington ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Schrön, Martin A1 - Oswald, Sascha A1 - Zacharias, Steffen A1 - Kasner, Mandy A1 - Dietrich, Peter A1 - Attinger, Sabine T1 - Neutrons on rails BT - Transregional monitoring of soil moisture and snow water equivalent JF - Geophysical research letters : GRL / American Geophysical Union N2 - Large-scale measurements of the spatial distribution of water content in soils and snow are challenging for state-of-the-art hydrogeophysical methods. Cosmic-ray neutron sensing (CRNS) is a noninvasive technology that has the potential to bridge the scale gap between conventional in situ sensors and remote sensing products in both, horizontal and vertical domains. In this study, we explore the feasibility and potential of estimating water content in soils and snow with neutron detectors in moving trains. Theoretical considerations quantify the stochastic measurement uncertainty as a function of water content, altitude, resolution, and detector efficiency. Numerical experiments demonstrate that the sensitivity of measured water content is almost unperturbed by train materials. Finally, three distinct real-world experiments provide a proof of concept on short and long-range tracks. With our results a transregional observational soil moisture product becomes a realistic vision within the next years. KW - soil moisture KW - transregional KW - multiscale KW - snow water equivalent KW - cosmic-ray neutron sensing KW - railway Y1 - 2021 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1029/2021GL093924 SN - 0094-8276 SN - 1944-8007 VL - 48 IS - 24 PB - Wiley CY - Hoboken, NJ ER - TY - THES A1 - Schrön, Martin T1 - Cosmic-ray neutron sensing and its applications to soil and land surface hydrology T1 - Neutronen aus kosmischer Strahlung und deren Anwendung für Boden- und Landoberflächen-Hydrologie BT - on neutron physics, method development, and soil moisture estimation across scales N2 - Water scarcity, adaption on climate change, and risk assessment of droughts and floods are critical topics for science and society these days. Monitoring and modeling of the hydrological cycle are a prerequisite to understand and predict the consequences for weather and agriculture. As soil water storage plays a key role for partitioning of water fluxes between the atmosphere, biosphere, and lithosphere, measurement techniques are required to estimate soil moisture states from small to large scales. The method of cosmic-ray neutron sensing (CRNS) promises to close the gap between point-scale and remote-sensing observations, as its footprint was reported to be 30 ha. However, the methodology is rather young and requires highly interdisciplinary research to understand and interpret the response of neutrons to soil moisture. In this work, the signal of nine detectors has been systematically compared, and correction approaches have been revised to account for meteorological and geomagnetic variations. Neutron transport simulations have been consulted to precisely characterize the sensitive footprint area, which turned out to be 6--18 ha, highly local, and temporally dynamic. These results have been experimentally confirmed by the significant influence of water bodies and dry roads. Furthermore, mobile measurements on agricultural fields and across different land use types were able to accurately capture the various soil moisture states. It has been further demonstrated that the corresponding spatial and temporal neutron data can be beneficial for mesoscale hydrological modeling. Finally, first tests with a gyrocopter have proven the concept of airborne neutron sensing, where increased footprints are able to overcome local effects. This dissertation not only bridges the gap between scales of soil moisture measurements. It also establishes a close connection between the two worlds of observers and modelers, and further aims to combine the disciplines of particle physics, geophysics, and soil hydrology to thoroughly explore the potential and limits of the CRNS method. N2 - Wasserknappheit, Anpassung an Klimaveränderungen, und Gefahrenabschätzungen von Dürren und Fluten sind heutzutage dringende Themen für Forschung und Gesellschaft. Vorallem um die Auswirkungen auf Wetter und Landwirtschaft zu verstehen und vorherzusagen, ist es wichtig, den Wasserkreislauf der Erde zu beobachten und zu simulieren. In diesem System spielt Bodenfeuchte eine Schlüsselrolle, welche den Wasseraustausch zwischen Boden, Luft, und Pflanzen bestimmt. Daher sind ausgeklügelte Messtechnologien erforderlich, welche Bodenfeuchte von kleinen Ackerschlägen bis hin zu großen Gebieten erfassen können. Die neuartige Methode, Neutronen aus kosmischer Strahlung zu messen (CRNS), ist eine vielversprechende Technologie um die Lücke zwischen Punktmessungen und Fernerkundungen zu schließen, da der Einflussbereich des Sensors bei ca. 30 ha liegen soll. Allerdings ist intensive interdisziplinäre Forschung nötig, um die Beziehung zwischen Neutronen und Bodefeuchte zu verstehen. In dieser Arbeit wurden erstmals verschiedene Sensoren systematisch miteinander verglichen, und die bisherigen Korrekturen für meteorologische und geomagnetische Einflüsse näher untersucht. Darüber hinaus wurden Simulationen der Neutronenphysik herangezogen, um den Einflussbereich des Sensors genauestens zu charakterisieren. Demnach ist der Sensor je nach Umgebungsfeuchte hauptsächlich in der Fläche von ca. 6--18 ha, sowie besonders im Nahbereich, sensitiv. Diese Resultate konnten durch Experimente nahe Gewässern und Straßen bestätigt werden. Dennoch ist die Methode nachwievor sehr gut in der Lage, die Bodenfeuchte in Ackerflächen, Grasland und auch Wäldern zu erfassen. Zudem wurde gezeigt, dass sich die räumlichen und zeitlichen Neutronen-Daten gut für die hydrologische Modellierung eignen. Abschließend wurde eine neue Möglichkeit untersucht, um Neutronen aus der Luft mit einem Traghubschrauber in noch größeren Gebieten zu messen. Diese Dissertation untersucht die CRNS-Methode auf verschiedenen Skalen, und verknüpft dabei Beobachtung mit Modellierung. Außerdem verbindet diese Arbeit die verschiedenen Disziplinen der Teilchenphysik, Geophysik, und Bodenhydrologie, um das Potential und die Grenzen der Methode ganzheitlich zu beurteilen. KW - soil moisture KW - hydrology KW - cosmic rays KW - neutrons KW - water monitoring KW - Bodenfeuchte KW - Hydrologie KW - kosmische Strahlung KW - Neutronen KW - Wasser-Monitoring Y1 - 2016 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-395433 SN - 978-3-8439-3139-7 PB - Verlag Dr. Hut GmbH CY - München ER - TY - THES A1 - Rivera Villarreyes, Carlos Andres T1 - Cosmic-ray neutron sensing for soil moisture measurements in cropped fields T1 - Bodenfeuchtemessungen auf landwirtschaftlichen Anbauflächen mittels kosmischer Neutronenstrahlung N2 - This cumulative dissertation explored the use of the detection of natural background of fast neutrons, the so-called cosmic-ray neutron sensing (CRS) approach to measure field-scale soil moisture in cropped fields. Primary cosmic rays penetrate the top atmosphere and interact with atmospheric particles. Such interaction results on a cascade of high-energy neutrons, which continue traveling through the atmospheric column. Finally, neutrons penetrate the soil surface and a second cascade is produced with the so-called secondary cosmic-ray neutrons (fast neutrons). Partly, fast neutrons are absorbed by hydrogen (soil moisture). Remaining neutrons scatter back to the atmosphere, where its flux is inversely correlated to the soil moisture content, therefore allowing a non-invasive indirect measurement of soil moisture. The CRS methodology is mainly evaluated based on a field study carried out on a farmland in Potsdam (Brandenburg, Germany) along three crop seasons with corn, sunflower and winter rye; a bare soil period; and two winter periods. Also, field monitoring was carried out in the Schaefertal catchment (Harz, Germany) for long-term testing of CRS against ancillary data. In the first experimental site, the CRS method was calibrated and validated using different approaches of soil moisture measurements. In a period with corn, soil moisture measurement at the local scale was performed at near-surface only, and in subsequent periods (sunflower and winter rye) sensors were placed in three depths (5 cm, 20 cm and 40 cm). The direct transfer of CRS calibration parameters between two vegetation periods led to a large overestimation of soil moisture by the CRS. Part of this soil moisture overestimation was attributed to an underestimation of the CRS observation depth during the corn period ( 5-10 cm), which was later recalculated to values between 20-40 cm in other crop periods (sunflower and winter rye). According to results from these monitoring periods with different crops, vegetation played an important role on the CRS measurements. Water contained also in crop biomass, above and below ground, produces important neutron moderation. This effect was accounted for by a simple model for neutron corrections due to vegetation. It followed crop development and reduced overall CRS soil moisture error for periods of sunflower and winter rye. In Potsdam farmland also inversely-estimated soil hydraulic parameters were determined at the field scale, using CRS soil moisture from the sunflower period. A modelling framework coupling HYDRUS-1D and PEST was applied. Subsequently, field-scale soil hydraulic properties were compared against local scale soil properties (modelling and measurements). Successful results were obtained here, despite large difference in support volume. Simple modelling framework emphasizes future research directions with CRS soil moisture to parameterize field scale models. In Schaefertal catchment, CRS measurements were verified using precipitation and evapotranspiration data. At the monthly resolution, CRS soil water storage was well correlated to these two weather variables. Also clearly, water balance could not be closed due to missing information from other compartments such as groundwater, catchment discharge, etc. In the catchment, the snow influence to natural neutrons was also evaluated. As also observed in Potsdam farmland, CRS signal was strongly influenced by snow fall and snow accumulation. A simple strategy to measure snow was presented for Schaefertal case. Concluding remarks of this dissertation showed that (a) the cosmic-ray neutron sensing (CRS) has a strong potential to provide feasible measurement of mean soil moisture at the field scale in cropped fields; (b) CRS soil moisture is strongly influenced by other environmental water pools such as vegetation and snow, therefore these should be considered in analysis; (c) CRS water storage can be used for soil hydrology modelling for determination of soil hydraulic parameters; and (d) CRS approach has strong potential for long term monitoring of soil moisture and for addressing studies of water balance. N2 - In dieser kumulativen Dissertation wird die Detektion des natürlichen Hintergrunds von schnellen Neutronen, das sogenannte “Cosmic-Ray Neutron Sensing” (CRS), zur Messung von Bodenfeuchte auf der Feldskala in landwirtschaftlich genutzten Flächen untersucht. Die kosmische Primärstrahlung durchdringt die oberste Atmosphäre, und interagiert mit atmosphärischen Teilchen. Durch diese Wechselwirkungen entstehen Kaskaden hochenergetischer Teilchen die bis in die Erdoberfläche eindringen, wobei schnelle Neutronen entstehen. Teilweise werden diese durch Wasserstoff (Bodenfeuchte) absorbiert, teilweise zurück in die Atmosphäre gestreut. Dieser Neutronenfluss über dem Boden korreliert invers mit der Bodenfeuchte, was so eine non-invasive und indirekte Bodenfeuchteschätzung ermöglicht. Die CRS-Methode wird vor allem in einer Feldstudie auf einem Ackerland in Potsdam (Brandenburg, Deutschland), einschließlich dreier Phasen mit Anbau von Mais, Sonnenblume und Winterroggen getestet und beurteilt. Darüber hinaus wurde ein Feldmonitoring im Schäfertaleinzugsgebiet (Harz, Deutschland) durchgeführt, um das Potential von Langzeit-CRS-Messungen gegenüber herkömmlich erhobenen bodenhydraulischen Daten abzuschätzen. Im ersten Untersuchungsgebiet wurde die CRS-Methode kalibriert und mittels verschiedener Bodenfeuchtemessansätze validiert. In der Maisanbauphase wurden die Bodenfeuchte-Punktmessungen zunächst nur an der nahen Bodenoberfläche durchgeführt. In den folgendenen Anbauphasen (Sonnenblume und Winterroggen) wurden dann die Sensoren in drei unterschiedlichen Tiefen (5 cm, 20 cm und 40 cm) installiert. Die direkte Übertragung der CRS-Kalibrierparameter zwischen zwei Vegetationsperioden führte zu einer starken Überschätzung der CRS-Bodenfeuchte. Ein Teil der überschätzten Bodenfeuchte wurde der Unterschätzung der CRS-Beobachtungstiefe während der Maisperiode (5-10 cm) zugeschrieben, welche später basierend auf Werten zwischen 20-40 cm in anderen Anbauperioden (Sonnenblume und Winterroggen) neuberechnet wurde. Gemäß der Ergebnisse dieser Beobachtungsperioden mit verschiedenen Feldfrüchten, spielte die Vegetation eine wichtige Rolle für die CRS-Messungen, da das Wasser, das in der über- und unterirdischen Biomasse vorhanden ist, die Neutronen bedeutend abdämpft. Dieser Effekt, sowie der Einfluss des Getreidewachstums und des reduzierten Gesamt-CRS-Bodenfeuchte-Fehlers, wurden in ein einfaches Model zur vegetationsbedingten Neutronenkorrektur berücksichtigt. So wurde ein gekoppelter HYDRUS-1D- und PEST-Ansatz angewendet, um bodenhydraulische Parameter auf dem Feldmassstab während der Sonnenblumen-Phase invers abzuschätzen. Dann wurden die inversen Schätzungen der effektiven bodenhydraulischen Eigenschaften innerhalb des von CRS beobachteten Volumens durch die lokalen Bodeneigenschaften (Modellierung und Messungen) validiert. Abgesehen von Unterschieden auf Grund der Beobachtungstiefe und somit des Volumens, wurden hierbei erfolgreiche Ergebnisse erzielt. Dieser einfache Ansatz unterstreicht das zukünftige Forschungspotential, z.B. um mit Hilfe von Bodenfeuchten aus CRS-Messungen Modelle auf der Feldskala zu parametrisieren. Im Schäfertaleinzugsgebiet wurden die Langzeit-CRS-Messungen mit Nie-derschlags- und Evapotranspirations-Raten abgeglichen. Bei einer monatlichen Auflösung korrelierte die Änderung des CRS-Bodenwasserspeichers mit diesen beiden Wettervariablen. Die Wasserbilanz konnte jedoch auf Grund fehlender Informationen bezüglich Grundwasser, Abfluss des Einzugesgebiets, etc. nicht geschlossen werden. Darüber hinaus wurde, wie auch am Potsdamer Standort, festgestellt, dass das CRS-Signal stark von Schneefall und Schneeakkumulationen beeinflusst wird. Eine einfache Anwendung zur Schneemessung mittels CRS wurde für den Schäfertalfall vorgestellt. Abschließend zeigte sich, dass (a) „Cosmic-Ray Neutron Sensing“ (CRS) ein großes Potential hat, Messungen der mittleren Bodenfeuchte auf der Feldskala im Bereich landwirtschaftlich genutzter Flächen zu realisieren; (b) die CRS-Bodenfeuchte stark durch andere Wasserspeicher, wie Vegetation und Schnee beeinflusst wird, und dies im Rahmen von Analysen berücksichtigt werden sollte; (c) die CRS-Messungen über eine bodenhydraulische Modellierung zur Bestimmung von bodenhydraulischen Paramtern genutzt werden kann; und (d) der CRS-Ansatz ein großes Potential für Langzeit-Bodenfeuchte-Monitoring und für Wasserbilanzstudien hat. KW - CRS KW - kosmische Neutronenstrahlung KW - Bodenfeuchte KW - Feld KW - cosmic-ray KW - neutron field KW - soil moisture Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus-69748 ER - TY - GEN A1 - Nord, Guillaume A1 - Boudevillain, Brice A1 - Berne, Alexis A1 - Branger, Flora A1 - Braud, Isabelle A1 - Dramais, Guillaume A1 - Gérard, Simon A1 - Le Coz, Jérôme A1 - Legoût, Cédric A1 - Molinié, Gilles A1 - Van Baelen, Joel A1 - Vandervaere, Jean-Pierre A1 - Andrieu, Julien A1 - Aubert, Coralie A1 - Calianno, Martin A1 - Delrieu, Guy A1 - Grazioli, Jacopo A1 - Hachani, Sahar A1 - Horner, Ivan A1 - Huza, Jessica A1 - Le Boursicaud, Raphaël A1 - Raupach, Timothy H. A1 - Teuling, Adriaan J. A1 - Uber, Magdalena A1 - Vincendon, Béatrice A1 - Wijbrans, Annette T1 - A high space–time resolution dataset linking meteorological forcing and hydro-sedimentary response in a mesoscale Mediterranean catchment (Auzon) of the Ardèche region, France T2 - Postprints der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe N2 - A comprehensive hydrometeorological dataset is presented spanning the period 1 January 201131 December 2014 to improve the understanding of the hydrological processes leading to flash floods and the relation between rainfall, runoff, erosion and sediment transport in a mesoscale catchment (Auzon, 116 km(2)) of the Mediterranean region. Badlands are present in the Auzon catchment and well connected to high-gradient channels of bedrock rivers which promotes the transfer of suspended solids downstream. The number of observed variables, the various sensors involved (both in situ and remote) and the space-time resolution (similar to km(2), similar to min) of this comprehensive dataset make it a unique contribution to research communities focused on hydrometeorology, surface hydrology and erosion. Given that rainfall is highly variable in space and time in this region, the observation system enables assessment of the hydrological response to rainfall fields. Indeed, (i) rainfall data are provided by rain gauges (both a research network of 21 rain gauges with a 5 min time step and an operational network of 10 rain gauges with a 5 min or 1 h time step), S-band Doppler dual-polarization radars (1 km(2), 5 min resolution), disdrometers (16 sensors working at 30 s or 1 min time step) and Micro Rain Radars (5 sensors, 100m height resolution). Additionally, during the special observation period (SOP-1) of the HyMeX (Hydrological Cycle in the Mediterranean Experiment) project, two X-band radars provided precipitation measurements at very fine spatial and temporal scales (1 ha, 5 min). (ii) Other meteorological data are taken from the operational surface weather observation stations of Meteo-France (including 2m air temperature, atmospheric pressure, 2 m relative humidity, 10m wind speed and direction, global radiation) at the hourly time resolution (six stations in the region of interest). (iii) The monitoring of surface hydrology and suspended sediment is multi-scale and based on nested catchments. Three hydrometric stations estimate water discharge at a 2-10 min time resolution. Two of these stations also measure additional physico-chemical variables (turbidity, temperature, conductivity) and water samples are collected automatically during floods, allowing further geochemical characterization of water and suspended solids. Two experimental plots monitor overland flow and erosion at 1 min time resolution on a hillslope with vineyard. A network of 11 sensors installed in the intermittent hydrographic network continuously measures water level and water temperature in headwater subcatchments (from 0.17 to 116 km(2)) at a time resolution of 2-5 min. A network of soil moisture sensors enables the continuous measurement of soil volumetric water content at 20 min time resolution at 9 sites. Additionally, concomitant observations (soil moisture measurements and stream gauging) were performed during floods between 2012 and 2014. Finally, this dataset is considered appropriate for understanding the rainfall variability in time and space at fine scales, improving areal rainfall estimations and progressing in distributed hydrological and erosion modelling. T3 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe - 671 KW - hydraulic properties KW - soil moisture KW - flash floods KW - rainfall KW - radar KW - scale KW - variability KW - transport KW - erosion KW - model Y1 - 2019 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-419127 SN - 1866-8372 IS - 671 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Meißl, Gertraud A1 - Formayer, Herbert A1 - Klebinder, Klaus A1 - Kerl, Florian A1 - Schöberl, Friedrich A1 - Geitner, Clemens A1 - Markart, Gerhard A1 - Leidinger, David A1 - Bronstert, Axel T1 - Climate change effects on hydrological system conditions influencing generation of storm runoff in small Alpine catchments JF - Hydrological processes : an international journal N2 - Floods and debris flows in small Alpine torrent catchments (<10km(2)) arise from a combination of critical antecedent system state conditions and mostly convective precipitation events with high precipitation intensities. Thus, climate change may influence the magnitude-frequency relationship of extreme events twofold: by a modification of the occurrence probabilities of critical hydrological system conditions and by a change of event precipitation characteristics. Three small Alpine catchments in different altitudes in Western Austria (Ruggbach, Brixenbach and Langentalbach catchment) were investigated by both field experiments and process-based simulation. Rainfall-runoff model (HQsim) runs driven by localized climate scenarios (CNRM-RM4.5/ARPEGE, MPI-REMO/ECHAM5 and ICTP-RegCM3/ECHAM5) were used in order to estimate future frequencies of stormflow triggering system state conditions. According to the differing altitudes of the study catchments, two effects of climate change on the hydrological systems can be observed. On one hand, the seasonal system state conditions of medium altitude catchments are most strongly affected by air temperature-controlled processes such as the development of the winter snow cover as well as evapotranspiration. On the other hand, the unglaciated high-altitude catchment is less sensitive to climate change-induced shifts regarding days with critical antecedent soil moisture and desiccated litter layer due to its elevation-related small proportion of sensitive areas. For the period 2071-2100, the number of days with critical antecedent soil moisture content will be significantly reduced to about 60% or even less in summer in all catchments. In contrast, the number of days with dried-out litter layers causing hydrophobic effects will increase by up to 8%-11% of the days in the two lower altitude catchments. The intensity analyses of heavy precipitation events indicate a clear increase in rain intensities of up to 10%. KW - climate change KW - hydrophobic effects KW - small Alpine catchments KW - soil moisture KW - storm runoff events KW - system conditions Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/hyp.11104 SN - 0885-6087 SN - 1099-1085 VL - 31 IS - 6 SP - 1314 EP - 1330 PB - Wiley CY - New York ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Lohmann, Dirk A1 - Tietjen, Britta A1 - Blaum, Niels A1 - Joubert, David F. A1 - Jeltsch, Florian T1 - Shifting thresholds and changing degradation patterns: climate change effects on the simulated long-term response of a semi-arid savanna to grazing JF - Journal of applied ecology : an official journal of the British Ecological Society N2 - 1. The complex, nonlinear response of dryland systems to grazing and climatic variations is a challenge to management of these lands. Predicted climatic changes will impact the desertification of drylands under domestic livestock production. Consequently, there is an urgent need to understand the response of drylands to grazing under climate change. 2. We enhanced and parameterized an ecohydrological savanna model to assess the impacts of a range of climate change scenarios on the response of a semi-arid African savanna to grazing. We focused on the effects of temperature and CO2 level increase in combination with changes in inter- and intra-annual precipitation patterns on the long-term dynamics of three major plant functional types. 3. We found that the capacity of the savanna to sustain livestock grazing was strongly influenced by climate change. Increased mean annual precipitation and changes in intra-annual precipitation pattern have the potential to slightly increase carrying capacities of the system. In contrast, decreased precipitation, higher interannual variation and temperature increase are leading to a severe decline of carrying capacities owing to losses of the perennial grass biomass. 4. Semi-arid rangelands will be at lower risk of shrub encroachment and encroachment will be less intense under future climatic conditions. This finding holds in spite of elevated levels of atmospheric CO2 and irrespective of changes in precipitation pattern, because of the drought sensitivity of germination and establishment of encroaching species. 5. Synthesis and applications. Changes in livestock carrying capacities, both positive and negative, mainly depend on the highly uncertain future rainfall conditions. However, independent of the specific changes, shrub encroachment becomes less likely and in many cases less severe. Thus, managers of semi-arid rangelands should shift their focus from woody vegetation towards perennial grass species as indicators for rangeland degradation. Furthermore, the resulting reduced competition from woody vegetation has the potential to facilitate ecosystem restoration measures such as re-introduction of desirable plant species that are only little promising or infeasible under current climatic conditions. On a global scale, the reductions in standing biomass resulting from altered degradation dynamics of semi-arid rangelands can have negative impacts on carbon sequestration. KW - CO2 increase KW - demographic bottleneck KW - ecohydrology KW - grid-based simulation model KW - livestock KW - precipitation pattern KW - savanna resilience KW - shrub encroachment KW - soil moisture KW - sustainable rangeland management Y1 - 2012 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2664.2012.02157.x SN - 0021-8901 VL - 49 IS - 4 SP - 814 EP - 823 PB - Wiley-Blackwell CY - Hoboken ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Kaiser, Thomas A1 - Wehrhan, Marc A1 - Werner, Armin A1 - Sommer, Michael T1 - Regionalizing ecological moisture levels and groundwater levels in grassland areas using thermal remote sensing JF - Grassland science N2 - Site-specific soil moisture and groundwater levels are key input parameters for ecological modeling. Obtaining such information in a comprehensive manner is difficult for large regions. We studied a floodplain region in the Federal State of Brandenburg, Germany, to examine the degree to which the average depth of groundwater tables can be derived from surface temperatures obtained by the ASTER radiospectrometer (spatial resolution of 90 m per pixel). A floristic ecological indicator representing the site-specific moisture level was applied to develop a proxy between the thermal satellite data and groundwater table depth. The use of spring scenes (late April to early May) from 2 years proved to be well suited for minimizing the effects of weather and land use. Vegetation surveys along transects that were 2 m wide across the pixel diagonals allowed for the calculation of average ecological moisture values of pixel-sites by applying Ellenberg-numbers. These values were used to calibrate the satellite data locally. There was a close relationship between surface temperature and the average ecological moisture value (R2 = 0.73). Average ecological moisture values were highly indicative of the average groundwater levels during a 7-year measurement series (R2 = 0.93). Satellite-supported thermal data from spring were suitable for estimating the average groundwater levels of low-lying grasslands on a larger scale. Ecological moisture values from the transect surveys effectively allowed the incorporation of relief heterogeneity within the thermal grid and the establishment of the correlation between thermal data and average groundwater table depth. Regression functions were used to produce a map of groundwater levels at the study site. KW - Ellenberg indicator values KW - groundwater table KW - satellite data KW - soil moisture Y1 - 2012 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1744-697X.2011.00240.x SN - 1744-6961 VL - 58 IS - 1 SP - 42 EP - 52 PB - Wiley-Blackwell CY - Malden ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Jagdhuber, Thomas A1 - Hajnsek, Irena A1 - Bronstert, Axel A1 - Papathanassiou, Konstantinos Panagiotis T1 - Soil moisture estimation under low vegetation cover using a multi-angular polarimetric decomposition JF - IEEE transactions on geoscience and remote sensing N2 - The estimation of volumetric soil moisture under low agricultural vegetation from fully polarimetric synthetic aperture radar (SAR) data at L-band using a multi-angular polarimetric decomposition is investigated. Radar polarimetry provides the framework to decompose the backscattered signal into different canonical scattering mechanisms referring to scattering contributions from the underlying soil and the vegetation cover. Multiangular observation diversity further increases the information space for soil moisture inversion enabling higher inversion rates and a stable inversion performance. The developed approach was applied on the multi-angular L-band data set acquired by German Aerospace Center's ESAR sensor as part of the OPAQUE campaign in 2008. The obtained results are compared against ground measurements collected by the OPAQUE team over a variety of vegetated agricultural fields. The validation of the estimated against ground measured soil moisture results in an root mean square error level of 6-8 vol.% including all test fields with a variety of crop types. KW - Multi-angular model-based decomposition KW - polarimetric SAR KW - soil moisture Y1 - 2013 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1109/TGRS.2012.2209433 SN - 0196-2892 VL - 51 IS - 4 SP - 2201 EP - 2215 PB - Inst. of Electr. and Electronics Engineers CY - Piscataway ER - TY - THES A1 - Jagdhuber, Thomas T1 - Soil parameter retrieval under vegetation cover using SAR polarimetry T1 - Bestimmung von Bodenparametern unter Vegetation mit Hilfe von SAR Polarimetrie N2 - Soil conditions under vegetation cover and their spatial and temporal variations from point to catchment scale are crucial for understanding hydrological processes within the vadose zone, for managing irrigation and consequently maximizing yield by precision farming. Soil moisture and soil roughness are the key parameters that characterize the soil status. In order to monitor their spatial and temporal variability on large scales, remote sensing techniques are required. Therefore the determination of soil parameters under vegetation cover was approached in this thesis by means of (multi-angular) polarimetric SAR acquisitions at a longer wavelength (L-band, lambda=23cm). In this thesis, the penetration capabilities of L-band are combined with newly developed (multi-angular) polarimetric decomposition techniques to separate the different scattering contributions, which are occurring in vegetation and on ground. Subsequently the ground components are inverted to estimate the soil characteristics. The novel (multi-angular) polarimetric decomposition techniques for soil parameter retrieval are physically-based, computationally inexpensive and can be solved analytically without any a priori knowledge. Therefore they can be applied without test site calibration directly to agricultural areas. The developed algorithms are validated with fully polarimetric SAR data acquired by the airborne E-SAR sensor of the German Aerospace Center (DLR) for three different study areas in Germany. The achieved results reveal inversion rates up to 99% for the soil moisture and soil roughness retrieval in agricultural areas. However, in forested areas the inversion rate drops significantly for most of the algorithms, because the inversion in forests is invalid for the applied scattering models at L-band. The validation against simultaneously acquired field measurements indicates an estimation accuracy (root mean square error) of 5-10vol.% for the soil moisture (range of in situ values: 1-46vol.%) and of 0.37-0.45cm for the soil roughness (range of in situ values: 0.5-4.0cm) within the catchment. Hence, a continuous monitoring of soil parameters with the obtained precision, excluding frozen and snow covered conditions, is possible. Especially future, fully polarimetric, space-borne, long wavelength SAR missions can profit distinctively from the developed polarimetric decomposition techniques for separation of ground and volume contributions as well as for soil parameter retrieval on large spatial scales. N2 - Zur Verbesserung der hydrologischen Abflussmodellierung, der Flutvorhersage, der gezielten Bewässerung von landwirtschaftlichen Nutzflächen und zum Schutz vor Ernteausfällen ist die Bestimmung der Bodenfeuchte und der Bodenrauhigkeit von grosser Bedeutung. Aufgrund der hohen zeitlichen sowie räumlichen Dynamik dieser Bodenparameter ist eine flächenhafte Erfassung mit hoher Auflösung und in kurzen zeitlichen Abständen notwendig. In situ Messtechniken stellen eine sehr zeit- und personalaufwändige Alternative dar, deshalb werden innovative Fernerkundungsverfahren mit aktivem Radar erprobt. Diese Aufnahmetechniken sind von Wetter- und Beleuchtungsverhältnissen unabhängig und besitzen zudem die Möglichkeit, abhängig von der Wellenlänge, in Medien einzudringen. Mit dem in dieser Arbeit verwendeten polarimetrischen Radar mit synthetischer Apertur (PolSAR) werden die Veränderungen der Polarisationen ausgewertet, da diese aufgrund der physikalischen Eigenschaften der reflektierenden Medien objektspezifisch verändert und gestreut werden. Es kann dadurch ein Bezug zwischen der empfangenen Radarwelle und den dielektrischen Eigenschaften (Feuchtegehalt) sowie der Oberflächengeometrie (Rauhigkeit) des Bodens hergestellt werden. Da vor allem in den gemässigten Klimazonen die landwirtschaftlichen Nutzflächen die meiste Zeit des Jahres mit Vegetation bestanden sind, wurden in dieser Dissertation Verfahren entwickelt, um die Bodenfeuchte und die Bodenrauhigkeit unter der Vegetation erfassen zu können. Um die einzelnen Rückstreubeiträge der Vegetation und des Bodens voneinander zu trennen, wurde die Eindringfähigkeit von längeren Wellenlängen (L-band, lambda=23cm) mit neu entwickelten (multi-angularen) polarimetrischen Dekompositionstechniken kombiniert, um die Komponente des Bodens zu extrahieren und auszuwerten. Für die Auswertung wurden polarimetrische Streumodelle benutzt, um die Bodenkomponente zu modellieren und dann mit der extrahierten Bodenkomponente der aufgenommenen Daten zu vergleichen. Die beste Übereinstimmung von Modell und Daten wurde als die gegebene Bodencharakteristik gewertet und dementsprechend invertiert. Die neu entwickelten, polarimetrischen Dekompositionstechniken für langwelliges polarimetrisches SAR basieren auf physikalischen Prinzipien, benötigen wenig Rechenzeit, erfordern keine Kalibrierung und sind ohne Verwendung von a priori Wissen analytisch lösbar. Um die entwickelten Algorithmen zu testen, wurden in drei verschiedenen Untersuchungsgebieten in Deutschland mit dem flugzeuggetragenen E-SAR Sensor des Deutschen Zentrums für Luft- und Raumfahrt (DLR) polarimetrische SAR Daten aufgenommen. Die Auswertungen der PolSAR Daten haben bestätigt, dass die besten Invertierungsergebnisse mit langen Wellenlängen erzielt werden können (L-Band). Des Weiteren konnten bei der Bestimmung der Bodenfeuchte und der Bodenrauhigkeit hohe Inversionsraten erreicht werden (bis zu 99% der Untersuchungsfläche). Es hat sich gezeigt, dass die polarimetrischen Streumodelle bei der gegebenen Wellenlänge nicht für bewaldete Gebiete geeignet sind, was die Anwendbarkeit des Verfahrens auf landwirtschaftliche Nutzflächen einschränkt. Die Validierung mit Bodenmessungen in den Untersuchungsgebieten, die zeitgleich zu den PolSAR Aufnahmen durchgeführt wurden, hat ergeben, dass eine kontinuierliche Beobachtung des Bodenzustandes (ausgenommen in Zeiten mit gefrorenem oder Schnee bedecktem Boden) mit einer Genauigkeit (Wurzel des mittleren quadratischen Fehlers) von 5-10vol.% für die Bodenfeuchte (in situ Messbereich: 1-46vol.%) und von 0.37-0.45cm für die Bodenrauhigkeit (in situ Messbereich: 0.5-4.0cm) möglich ist. Besonders künftige Fernerkundungsmissionen mit langwelligem, voll polarimetrischem SAR können von den entwickelten Dekompositionstechniken profitieren, um die Vegetationskomponente von der Bodenkomponente zu trennen und die Charakteristik des Oberbodens flächenhaft zu bestimmen. KW - SAR KW - Polarimetrie KW - Bodenfeuchte KW - polarimetrische Dekompositionen KW - Fernerkundung KW - SAR KW - Polarimetry KW - soil moisture KW - polarimetric decompositions KW - remote sensing Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus-60519 ER - TY - GEN A1 - Jackisch, Conrad A1 - Angermann, Lisa A1 - Allroggen, Niklas A1 - Sprenger, Matthias A1 - Blume, Theresa A1 - Tronicke, Jens A1 - Zehe, Erwin T1 - Form and function in hillslope hydrology BT - in situ imaging and characterization of flow-relevant structures T2 - Postprints der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe N2 - The study deals with the identification and characterization of rapid subsurface flow structures through pedo- and geo-physical measurements and irrigation experiments at the point, plot and hillslope scale. Our investigation of flow-relevant structures and hydrological responses refers to the general interplay of form and function, respectively. To obtain a holistic picture of the subsurface, a large set of different laboratory, exploratory and experimental methods was used at the different scales. For exploration these methods included drilled soil core profiles, in situ measurements of infiltration capacity and saturated hydraulic conductivity, and laboratory analyses of soil water retention and saturated hydraulic conductivity. The irrigation experiments at the plot scale were monitored through a combination of dye tracer, salt tracer, soil moisture dynamics, and 3-D time-lapse ground penetrating radar (GPR) methods. At the hillslope scale the subsurface was explored by a 3-D GPR survey. A natural storm event and an irrigation experiment were monitored by a dense network of soil moisture observations and a cascade of 2-D time-lapse GPR "trenches". We show that the shift between activated and non-activated state of the flow paths is needed to distinguish structures from overall heterogeneity. Pedo-physical analyses of point-scale samples are the basis for sub-scale structure inference. At the plot and hillslope scale 3-D and 2-D time-lapse GPR applications are successfully employed as non-invasive means to image subsurface response patterns and to identify flow-relevant paths. Tracer recovery and soil water responses from irrigation experiments deliver a consistent estimate of response velocities. The combined observation of form and function under active conditions provides the means to localize and characterize the structures (this study) and the hydrological processes (companion study Angermann et al., 2017, this issue). T3 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe - 665 KW - Ground Penetrating Radar KW - preferential flow KW - solute transport KW - Catchment Hydrology KW - multiple scales KW - soil moisture KW - water content KW - tracer KW - field KW - model Y1 - 2019 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-419188 SN - 1866-8372 IS - 665 ER - TY - THES A1 - Hohenbrink, Tobias Ludwig T1 - Turning a problem into a solution: heterogeneities in soil hydrology T1 - Ein Problem zur Lösung machen: Heterogenitäten in der Bodenhydrologie N2 - It is commonly recognized that soil moisture exhibits spatial heterogeneities occurring in a wide range of scales. These heterogeneities are caused by different factors ranging from soil structure at the plot scale to land use at the landscape scale. There is an urgent need for effi-cient approaches to deal with soil moisture heterogeneity at large scales, where manage-ment decisions are usually made. The aim of this dissertation was to test innovative ap-proaches for making efficient use of standard soil hydrological data in order to assess seep-age rates and main controls on observed hydrological behavior, including the role of soil het-erogeneities. As a first step, the applicability of a simplified Buckingham-Darcy method to estimate deep seepage fluxes from point information of soil moisture dynamics was assessed. This was done in a numerical experiment considering a broad range of soil textures and textural het-erogeneities. The method performed well for most soil texture classes. However, in pure sand where seepage fluxes were dominated by heterogeneous flow fields it turned out to be not applicable, because it simply neglects the effect of water flow heterogeneity. In this study a need for new efficient approaches to handle heterogeneities in one-dimensional water flux models was identified. As a further step, an approach to turn the problem of soil moisture heterogeneity into a solu-tion was presented: Principal component analysis was applied to make use of the variability among soil moisture time series for analyzing apparently complex soil hydrological systems. It can be used for identifying the main controls on the hydrological behavior, quantifying their relevance, and describing their particular effects by functional averaged time series. The ap-proach was firstly tested with soil moisture time series simulated for different texture classes in homogeneous and heterogeneous model domains. Afterwards, it was applied to 57 mois-ture time series measured in a multifactorial long term field experiment in Northeast Germa-ny. The dimensionality of both data sets was rather low, because more than 85 % of the total moisture variance could already be explained by the hydrological input signal and by signal transformation with soil depth. The perspective of signal transformation, i.e. analyzing how hydrological input signals (e.g., rainfall, snow melt) propagate through the vadose zone, turned out to be a valuable supplement to the common mass flux considerations. Neither different textures nor spatial heterogeneities affected the general kind of signal transfor-mation showing that complex spatial structures do not necessarily evoke a complex hydro-logical behavior. In case of the field measured data another 3.6% of the total variance was unambiguously explained by different cropping systems. Additionally, it was shown that dif-ferent soil tillage practices did not affect the soil moisture dynamics at all. The presented approach does not require a priori assumptions about the nature of physical processes, and it is not restricted to specific scales. Thus, it opens various possibilities to in-corporate the key information from monitoring data sets into the modeling exercise and thereby reduce model uncertainties. N2 - Es ist allgemein anerkannt, dass Bodenfeuchte auf verschiedenen Raumskalen räumliche Heterogenitäten aufweist. Diese Heterogenitäten werden durch verschiedene Faktoren verursacht, die auf den unterschiedlichen Skalen wirken. Dies können z.B. die Bodenstruktur auf Plotskala oder die Landnutzung auf Landschaftsskala sein. Es werden dringend effiziente Ansätze benötigt, um mit den Heterogenitäten der Bodenfeuchte umzugehen. Dies gilt be-sonders für große Skalen, auf denen in der Regel weitreichende Managemententscheidun-gen getroffen werden. Das Ziel dieser Dissertation war es, effiziente Methoden zu testen, die es ermöglichen auf Basis bodenhydrologischer Daten sowohl Sickerwasserraten als auch die Haupteinflussfaktoren der Bodenfeuchtedynamik zu bestimmen. Dies bezieht Effekte von Bodenheterogenitäten mit ein. In einem ersten Schritt wurde die Eignung einer vereinfachten Buckingham-Darcy Methode zur Abschätzung von Sickerwasserflüssen auf Grundlage punktuell gemessener Zeitreihen der Bodenfeuchte untersucht. Hierzu wurde eine Simulationsstudie durchgeführt, in der ein breites Spektrum an Bodentexturen und Texturheterogenitäten berücksichtigt wurde. Die Methode lieferte gute Ergebnisse für die meisten Texturklassen. In reinem Sand jedoch stell-te sie sich als nicht anwendbar heraus, da hier Sickerwasserflüsse von heterogenen Fließfel-dern dominiert wurden. In dieser Studie wurde ein Bedarf an neuen effizienten Ansätzen für den Umgang mit Heterogenitäten in eindimensionalen Wasserflussmodellen identifiziert. In einem weiteren Schritt wurde ein Ansatz vorgestellt, um aus dem Problem der Boden-feuchteheterogenität eine Lösung zu machen: In einer Hauptkomponentenanalyse wurde die Variabilität zwischen Bodenfeuchtezeitreihen genutzt, um die wahre Komplexität bo-denhydrologischer Systeme zu analysieren. Auf diesem Weg ist es möglich die Haupteinfluss-faktoren des hydrologischen Verhaltens zu identifizieren, ihre Relevanz zu quantifizieren und ihre jeweiligen Effekte als funktional gemittelte Zeitreihen zu beschreiben. Der Ansatz wurde zunächst mit simulierten Bodenfeuchtezeitreihen für unterschiedliche Texturklassen im ho-mogenen und heterogenen Fall getestet. Anschließend wurde die Methode auf 57 Boden-feuchtezeitreihen angewendet, die in einem Langzeitfeldexperiment in Nordostdeutschland gemessen wurden. Die Dimensionalität beider Datensätze war gering, da mehr als 85 % der gesamten Boden-feuchtevarianz bereits durch das hydrologische Eingangssignal und die Transformation dieses Signals mit zunehmender Bodentiefe erklärt werden konnten. Analysen der Signaltransfor-mation haben sich als wertvolle Ergänzung zu den weit verbreiteten Massenflussbetrachtun-gen herausgestellt. Hierbei wird untersucht, wie sich hydrologische Eingangssignale (z.B. Nie-derschlag oder Schneeschmelze) in der vadosen Zone fortpflanzen. Die generellen Muster der Signaltransformation wurden weder durch verschiedene Bodentexturen noch durch räumliche Heterogeneitäten beeinfluss. Dies zeigt, dass komplexe räumliche Strukturen nicht zwangsläufig ein komplexes hydrologisches Verhalten hervorrufen. Im Fall der Felddaten wurden weitere 3,6 % der Gesamtvarianz durch verschiedene Fruchtfolgen erklärt. Darüber hinaus konnte gezeigt werden, dass die Bodenbearbeitung keinen Einfluss auf die Boden-feuchtedynamik hatte. Der vorgestellte Ansatz erfordert keine Vorannahmen über physikalische Prozesse und ist nicht auf eine bestimmte Skala begrenzt. Dadurch ergeben sich viele Möglichkeiten, wichtige Informationen aus Monitoringdatensätzen in die Modellbildung einzubeziehen und damit Modell-unsicherheiten zu verringern. KW - soil hydrology KW - soil heterogeneity KW - soil moisture KW - deep seepage KW - time series analysis KW - transformation of hydrological signals KW - Bodenhydrologie KW - Bodenheterogenität KW - Bodenfeuchte KW - Tiefenversickerung KW - Zeitreihenanalyse KW - Transformation hydrologischer Signale Y1 - 2017 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-101485 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Graeff, T. A1 - Zehe, E. A1 - Blume, T. A1 - Francke, Till A1 - Schroeder, B. T1 - Predicting event response in a nested catchment with generalized linear models and a distributed watershed model JF - HYDROLOGICAL PROCESSES N2 - This study focuses on the prediction of event-based runoff coefficients (an important descriptor of flood events) for nested catchments up to an area of 50?km(2) in the Eastern Ore Mountains. The four main objectives of the study are (i) the prediction of runoff coefficients with the statistical method of generalized linear models, (ii) the comparison of the results of the linear models with estimates of a distributed conceptual model, (iii) the comparison of the dynamics of observed soil moisture and simulated saturation deficit of the hydrological model and (iv) the analysis of the relationship between runoff coefficient and observed and simulated wetness. Different predictor variables were selected to describe the runoff coefficient and were differentiated into variables describing the catchment’s antecedent wetness and meteorological forcing. The best statistical model was estimated in a stepwise approach on the basis of hierarchical partitioning, an exhaustive search algorithm and model validation with jackknifing. We then applied the rainfall runoff model WaSiM ETH to predict the runoff processes for the two larger catchments. Locally measured small-scale soil moisture (acquired at a scale of four to five magnitudes smaller than the catchment) was identified as one of the key predictor variables for the estimation of the runoff coefficient with the general linear model. It was found that the relationship betweenobserved and simulated (using WaSiM ETH) wetness is strongly hysteretic. The runoff coefficients derived from the rainfall runoff simulations systematically underestimate the observed values. Copyright (C) 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. KW - runoff coefficient KW - soil moisture KW - antecedent wetness KW - GLM KW - nested catchment Y1 - 2012 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/hyp.8463 SN - 0885-6087 SN - 1099-1085 VL - 26 IS - 24 SP - 3749 EP - 3769 PB - WILEY-BLACKWELL CY - HOBOKEN ER - TY - JOUR A1 - de Figueiredo, Jose Vidal A1 - de Araujo, Jose Carlos A1 - Medeiros, Pedro Henrique Augusto A1 - Costa, Alexandre C. T1 - Runoff initiation in a preserved semiarid Caatinga small watershed, Northeastern Brazil JF - Hydrological processes N2 - This study analyses some hydrological driving forces and their interrelation with surface-flow initiation in a semiarid Caatinga basin (12km(2)), Northeastern Brazil. During the analysis period (2005 - 2014), 118 events with precipitation higher than 10mm were monitored, providing 45 events with runoff, 25 with negligible runoff and 49 without runoff. To verify the dominant processes, 179 on-site measurements of saturated hydraulic conductivity (Ksat) were conducted. The results showed that annual runoff coefficient lay below 0.5% and discharge at the outlet has only occurred four days per annum on average, providing an insight to the surface-water scarcity of the Caatinga biome. The most relevant variables to explain runoff initiation were total precipitation and maximum 60-min rainfall intensity (I-60). Runoff always occurred when rainfall surpassed 31mm, but it never occurred for rainfall below 14mm or for I-60 below 12mmh(-1). The fact that the duration of the critical intensity is similar to the basin concentration time (65min) and that the infiltration threshold value approaches the river-bank saturated hydraulic conductivity support the assumption that Hortonian runoff prevails. However, none of the analysed variables (total or precedent precipitation, soil moisture content, rainfall intensities or rainfall duration) has been able to explain the runoff initiation in all monitored events: the best criteria, e.g. failed to explain 27% of the events. It is possible that surface-flow initiation in the Caatinga biome is strongly influenced by the root-system dynamics, which changes macro-porosity status and, therefore, initial abstraction. Copyright (c) 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. KW - hydraulic conductivity KW - soil moisture KW - root system KW - semi-arid KW - Caatinga KW - connectivity Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/hyp.10801 SN - 0885-6087 SN - 1099-1085 VL - 30 SP - 2390 EP - 2400 PB - Wiley CY - Hoboken ER - TY - THES A1 - Antonoglou, Nikolaos T1 - GNSS-based remote sensing: Innovative observation of key hydrological parameters in the Central Andes T1 - GNSS-basierte Fernerkundung: Innovative Beobachtung der wichtigsten hydrologischen Parameter in den zentralen Anden N2 - The Central Andean region is characterized by diverse climate zones with sharp transitions between them. In this work, the area of interest is the South-Central Andes in northwestern Argentina that borders with Bolivia and Chile. The focus is the observation of soil moisture and water vapour with Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) remote-sensing methodologies. Because of the rapid temporal and spatial variations of water vapour and moisture circulations, monitoring this part of the hydrological cycle is crucial for understanding the mechanisms that control the local climate. Moreover, GNSS-based techniques have previously shown high potential and are appropriate for further investigation. This study includes both logistic-organization effort and data analysis. As for the prior, three GNSS ground stations were installed in remote locations in northwestern Argentina to acquire observations, where there was no availability of third-party data. The methodological development for the observation of the climate variables of soil moisture and water vapour is independent and relies on different approaches. The soil-moisture estimation with GNSS reflectometry is an approximation that has demonstrated promising results, but it has yet to be operationally employed. Thus, a more advanced algorithm that exploits more observations from multiple satellite constellations was developed using data from two pilot stations in Germany. Additionally, this algorithm was slightly modified and used in a sea-level measurement campaign. Although the objective of this application is not related to monitoring hydrological parameters, its methodology is based on the same principles and helps to evaluate the core algorithm. On the other hand, water-vapour monitoring with GNSS observations is a well-established technique that is utilized operationally. Hence, the scope of this study is conducting a meteorological analysis by examining the along-the-zenith air-moisture levels and introducing indices related to the azimuthal gradient. The results of the experiments indicate higher-quality soil moisture observations with the new algorithm. Furthermore, the analysis using the stations in northwestern Argentina illustrates the limits of this technology because of varying soil conditions and shows future research directions. The water-vapour analysis points out the strong influence of the topography on atmospheric moisture circulation and rainfall generation. Moreover, the GNSS time series allows for the identification of seasonal signatures, and the azimuthal-gradient indices permit the detection of main circulation pathways. N2 - Die Zentralanden sind eine Region, in der verschiedene Klimazonen nur durch kurze Übergänge gekennzeichnet sind. Der geographische Schwerpunkt dieser Arbeit liegt in den südlichen Zentralanden im Grenzgebiet zwischen Argentinien, Bolivien und Chile, und der wissenschaftliche Schwerpunkt ist in der Überwachung der Bodenfeuchtigkeit und des Wasserdampfs mit Fernerkundungsmethoden des Globales Navigationssatellitensystem (Global Navigation Satellite System - GNSS) angesiedelt. Wegen der raschen zeitlichen und räumlichen Schwankungen des Wasserdampfs und den damit häufig verbundenen Niederschlägen und der Feuchtigkeitszirkulation ist die Beobachtung dieses Teils des hydrologischen Zyklus von entscheidender Bedeutung für das Verständnis des lokalen Klimas. Darüber hinaus haben GNSS-gestützte Techniken in anderen Studien bereits ein hohes Potenzial gezeigt, erfordern aber in einigen Bereichen weitere Untersuchungen. Diese Studie umfasst sowohl logistischen Aufwand als auch Datenanalyse. Dazu wurden drei GNSS-Bodenstationen in abgelegenen Orten im Nordwesten Argentiniens installiert, um Beobachtungen zu sammeln, da dort keine externen Daten verfügbar waren. Die methodische Entwicklung für die Beobachtung der Klimavariablen Bodenfeuchtigkeit und Wasserdampfs ist unabhängig voneinander. Die Messung der Bodenfeuchte mit Hilfe der GNSS-Reflektometrie ist eine Annäherung, die vielversprechende Ergebnisse erbracht hat, aber bisher noch nicht operationell eingesetzt wurde. Daher wurde ein fortschrittlicherer Algorithmus entwickelt, der Beobachtungen von mehreren Satellitenkonstellationen nutzt und unter anderem Daten von zwei Pilotstationen in Deutschland verwendet. Außerdem wurde dieser Algorithmus leicht modifiziert und in einer Meeresspiegelmesskampagne eingesetzt. Obwohl diese Andwendung nicht direkt mit der Überwachung hydrologischer Parameter zusammenhängt, basiert die Methodik auf denselben Prinzipien und hilft bei der Bewertung des entwickelten Algorithmus. Auf der anderen Seite ist die Überwachung des Wasserdampfs mit GNSS-Beobachtungen eine anerkannte Technik, die in der Praxis bereits seit mehreren Jahren eingesetzt wird. Diese Studie befasst sich daher mit der Durchführung einer meteorologischen Analyse der Luftfeuchtigkeitswerte entlang des Zenits und der Entwicklung von klimatischen Indizes, die sich auf den azimutalen Gradienten beziehen. Die Ergebnisse der Experimente zeigen, dass die Qualität der Bodenfeuchtebeobachtungen mit dem neuen Algorithmus vielversprechend und besser sind. Darüber hinaus zeigt die Analyse anhand der Stationen im nordwesten Argentiniens die Grenzen dieser Technologie aufgrund der sehr unterschiedlichen Bodenbedingungen auf und gibt mögliche zukünftige Forschungsrichtung an. Die Wasserdampfanalyse verdeutlicht den Einfluss der Topographie auf die Luftfeuchtigkeit und der Regenmenge. Außerdem ermöglichen die GNSS-Zeitreihen die Identifizierung der jahreszeitlichen Signaturen, und Messungen der azimutal Gradienten erlauben die Erkennung der wichtigsten Zirkulationswege. KW - remote sensing KW - GNSS KW - GPS KW - water vapour KW - soil moisture KW - Central Andes KW - zentrale Anden KW - globales Navigationssatellitensystem KW - globales Positionsbestimmungssystem KW - Fernerkundung KW - Bodenfeuchtigkeit KW - Wasserdampf Y1 - 2024 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-628256 ER -