COMPARATIVE ASSESSMENT OF CONVENTIONAL VERSUS REMOTE SENSING BASED APPROACH FOR LAKE EVAPORATION ESTIMATION: THE CASE OF LAKE HAWASSA, ETHIOPIA
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Date
2018-10-11
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Hawassa University
Abstract
Evaporation is the major component of the water and energy budget of the water bodies. The
Evaporation process needs special attention for a better allocation and management of water
resources. The main objective of this study was to compare evaporation estimates based on
conventional and Remote Sensing approach. Different methods have been developed and
implemented to estimate total evaporation, including meteorological ground-based point data,
field measurements and spatially explicit remotely sensed data. Surface Energy Balance System
(SEBS) was employed to estimate the Lake Hawassa evaporation and other energy balance
components. The SEBS results were compared with meteorological methods results (Debruine Keigeman, BREB method, and Penman), using Pan Evaporation as a reference. Nash-Sutcliffe,
efficiency coefficient (E), Wilmott‟s index (dr) for evaporation estimates, and Root Mean Square
Deviation (RMSD) were used as a statistical performance measures for energy balance
component estimates. The SEBS results indicate that the Lake Hawassa average evaporation
estimate is 1.16 mm/day in September and 5.2 mm/day in February. Using Pan Evaporation
measurements as a tool; evaporation estimates of SEBS perform better than any other
metrological method, with Nash-Sutcliffe, efficiency coefficient (E) = 0.48 and Wilmott‟s index
(dr) = 0.48 as well. Penman and BREB methods perform poor in evaporation estimation from
Lake Hawassa. SEBS heat fluxes RMSD from the meteorological based estimation were
15.01W/m2
for Net Radiation (Rn), 13.7 W/m2 for Stored Heat Flux (G0), and 11.54 W/m2
for
Sensible Heat Flux (H). Generally it was concluded that the SEBS remote sensing algorithm is
applicable for evaporation and other energy balance components estimation on Lake Hawassa.
Description
Keywords
Evaporation, Lake Hawassa, Remote Sensing, Pan Evaporation, Heat Fluxes
