EGU22-11356, updated on 06 Oct 2022
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu22-11356
EGU General Assembly 2022
© Author(s) 2022. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

High resolution soil drought simulations evaluated at an unprecedented broad-range of soil moisture networks in Germany

Friedrich Boeing1, Oldrich Rakovec1,2, Rohini Kumar1, Luis Samaniego1, Martin Schrön3, Anke Hildebrandt1, Corinna Rebmann1, Stephan Thober1, Sebastian Müller1, Steffen Zacharias3, Heye Bogena4, Katrin Schneider5, Ralf Kiese5, and Andreas Marx1
Friedrich Boeing et al.
  • 1Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research – UFZ, Department Computational Hydrosystems, Permoserstraße 15, 04318 Leipzig, Germany
  • 2Faculty of Environmental Sciences, Czech University of Life Sciences Prague, Praha-Suchdol 16500, Czech Republic
  • 3Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research – UFZ, Department Monitoring and Exploration Technologies, Permoserstraße 15, 04318 Leipzig, Germany
  • 4Forschungszentrum Jülich GmbH, Agrosphere Institute (IBG-3), Germany
  • 5Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, IMK-IFU, Ecosystem Matter Fluxes, Kreuzeckbahnstr. 19, 82467 Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany

The 2018-2020 consecutive drought events in Germany resulted in impacts related with several sectors such as agriculture, forestry, water management, industry, energy production and transport. The key to increase preparedness for extreme drought events are high-resolution information systems. A major national operational drought information system is the German Drought Monitor (GDM), launched in 2014 [1]. It provides daily soil moisture (SM) simulated with the mesoscale hydrological model (mHM) and its related soil moisture index [2] at a spatial resolution of 4×4 km². The release of the new soil map BUEK200 allowed us to increase its model resolution to ≈1.2×1.2 km², which is used now for the second version of the GDM [3].

To explore the ability of the GMD-v2 to provide drought information at one-kilometer scale, we evaluated mHM soil moisture simulations against an unprecedented large sample of soil moisture observations from 40 locations across Germany. These SM observations are obtained from single profile measurements, spatially distributed sensor networks, cosmic-ray neutron stations, and lysimeters over a wide range of climatic conditions, vegetation types and soil depths. Specifically, the study aimed at answering two research questions: 1) how well do high-resolution German-wide soil moisture simulations capture the dynamics in observed soil moisture that constitute the basis for the near real-time soil moisture drought monitoring system? 2) Does the mHM simulations obtained with the high spatial resolution data set provide soil moisture estimates with greater model efficiency than those obtained in the coarser resolution?

The results showed that the agreement of simulated and observed SM dynamics is especially high during the vegetation period (0.84 median Spearman correlation(r)) and lower in winter (0.59 median r). Moderate but significant improvements between the low- and high-resolution GDM versions to observed SM were found in correlations for autumn (+0.07 median r) and winter (+0.12 median r). The spatially distributed sensor networks outperformed single profile measurements with higher than average correlation values especially for the 25–60 cm depth, which supports the closer scale match of spatially distributed measurements to the simulations. The results indicate areas for potential improvement and shows limitations from both: model parameterization (e.g., improvement of local scale hydrological processes) and observations methodology (e.g., reduction of measurement errors). Finally, the results of this study underline the fact that nationwide drought information systems depend both on appropriate simulations of the water cycle and a broad, high-quality observational soil moisture database.

References:

[1] Zink, M. et al. doi: 10.1088/1748-9326/11/7/074002 , 2016

[2] Samaniego et al. doi: 10.1175/jhm-d-12-075.1 2013

[3] Boeing, et al. doi: 10.5194/hess-2021-402 2021 (in revision)

How to cite: Boeing, F., Rakovec, O., Kumar, R., Samaniego, L., Schrön, M., Hildebrandt, A., Rebmann, C., Thober, S., Müller, S., Zacharias, S., Bogena, H., Schneider, K., Kiese, R., and Marx, A.: High resolution soil drought simulations evaluated at an unprecedented broad-range of soil moisture networks in Germany, EGU General Assembly 2022, Vienna, Austria, 23–27 May 2022, EGU22-11356, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu22-11356, 2022.