From surface to subsurface: Investigating drought cascades and recovery patterns with (daily) satellite observations of soil moisture and terrestrial water storage
- 1HafenCity University Hamburg, Geodesy and Geoinformatics, Hamburg, Germany (daniel.blank@hcu-hamburg.de)
- 2Helmholtz-Centre Potsdam, GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences, Potsdam, Germany
- 3University of Potsdam, Institute of Environmental Science and Geography, Potsdam, Germany
Changes in soil water storage can be studied on a global scale using a variety of satellite observations. With active or passive microwave remote sensing, we can study the upper few centimeters of the soil, while satellite gravimetry allows us to detect changes in the entire column of terrestrial water storage (TWS). The combination of both types of data can provide valuable insight into hydrological dynamics in different soil depths towards a better understanding of changes in subsurface water storage.
We use daily Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) data and satellite soil moisture data to identify extreme hydroclimatic events, focusing on prolonged droughts. To enhance our comprehension of the subsurface, we utilize not just surface soil moisture data but also integrate information on root zone soil moisture. Original level-3 surface soil moisture data sets of SMAP and SMOS are compared to post-processed level-4 data products (both surface and root zone soil moisture) and a multi-satellite product provided by the ESA CCI.
We analyse the correspondence between high and low percentiles in TWS and soil moisture time series, which allows us to identify extreme events in different integration depths and storage compartments. Furthermore, we compute the rate of change of anomalies to assess how quickly the system accumulates storage deficits during drought conditions and recovers from them for different soil depths. Our investigation focuses on the temporal dynamics of near-surface soil moisture and TWS, highlighting the cascading effects that propagate from the surface into the subsurface. The results we obtained indicate characteristic patterns of the temporal dynamics of drought recovery in varying soil depths. Specifically, our analysis shows that surface soil moisture recovers faster than TWS, and that this recovery process slows down as soil integration depth increases.
How to cite: Blank, D., Eicker, A., and Güntner, A.: From surface to subsurface: Investigating drought cascades and recovery patterns with (daily) satellite observations of soil moisture and terrestrial water storage, EGU General Assembly 2024, Vienna, Austria, 14–19 Apr 2024, EGU24-7888, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu24-7888, 2024.