Abstract

Evapotranspiration (ET) estimation has been one of the most challenging problems in recent decades for hydrometeorologists. In this study, a nonparametric approach to estimate terrestrial evaporation was evaluated using both model simulation and measurements from three sites. Both the model simulation and the in situ evaluation at the Tiger Bush Site revealed that this approach would greatly overestimate ET under dry conditions (evaporative fraction smaller than 0.4). For the evaluation at the Tiger Bush Site, the difference between ET estimates and site observations could be as large as 130 W/m2. However, this approach provided good estimates over the two crop sites. The Nash-Sutcliffe coefficient (E) was 0.9 and 0.94, respectively, for WC06 and Yingke. A further theoretical analysis indicates the nonparametric approach is very close to the equilibrium evaporation equation under wet conditions, and this can explain the good performance of this approach at the two crop sites in this study. The evaluation indicates that this approach needs more careful appraisal and that its application in dry conditions should be avoided.

1. Introduction

Water is fundamental to the coupled human-environment systems [1, 2]. The role of the land surface in partitioning available water between evaporation and runoff and in partitioning available energy between sensible and latent heat fluxes is significant and affects the state of the atmosphere directly [3, 4]. Evapotranspiration is a very important process that relates to energy and water exchange between the hydrosphere, atmosphere, and biosphere [5, 6]. Accurate estimate of ET will benefit water planning and management in arid and semiarid areas. Many methods have been proposed to measure ET at various scales [7]. Sap-flow and porometer readings are often used to measure ET from individual plants. The Bowen ratio and lysimeter and scintillometer readings are used to measure ET from fields. Eddy covariance (EC) and catchment water balance are often used to measure ET on a landscape scale. Remote sensing-based ET models are suitable for estimating ET on a regional scale.

Hydrometeorologists have striven for decades to estimate natural evaporation from land surfaces. Dalton [8] related evaporation to a wind function and vapor pressure deficit. Fick [9] proposed a one-dimensional form of diffusion equation, which greatly contributed to the understanding of evaporation. Bowen [10] presented the ratio of heat loss by conduction to that by evaporation (known as the Bowen ratio) as a function of vertical temperature and humidity gradients. Later, the Bowen ratio method is widely used for measuring ET. Penman [11] advanced the evaporation theory and proposed the combination method to estimate evaporation from an open water surface. Monteith [12] developed the Penman equation and extended it to cropped surfaces by introducing the surface and aerodynamic resistance. In the past few years, the FAO Penman-Monteith equation was recommended to estimate reference ET (ET0), and the “Kc-ET0” approach has been widely used for computing crop water requirements [13]. Comprehensive reviews of the historical study of the natural evaporation from land can be found in numerous papers [3, 14, 15]. However, large discrepancies in latent and sensible heat fluxes were reported between field observations and general circulation model (GCM) simulations based on the above ET methods [16]. In the abovementioned methods, transfer coefficients such as surface resistance, conductance, or bulk coefficient are semiempirically or empirically parameterized and lead to different results and uncertainties in ET estimates [7, 17] because most of them could not be measured directly [15].

Recently, a nonparametric approach was proposed by Liu et al. [18] to estimate terrestrial evaporation. The nonparametric approach is derived from the thermodynamic process following Hamilton’s principle. This approach requires measurements of air temperature, surface temperature, net radiation, and soil heat flux. The solution is simple and no parameterization of a transfer coefficient is needed. Liu et al. [18] evaluated this approach with observations from 26 eddy covariance sites, and they found that this approach showed a good performance at 23 sites. They further found that the nonparametric approach could achieve a compatible performance to the Penman-Monteith approach at two observation sites. However, careful appraisal is needed, and a more critical evaluation of the nonparametric approach is necessary. The purpose of this paper is to evaluate the capability of the nonparametric approach to predict ET at various soil moisture conditions. Section 2 presents a brief description of the nonparametric approach, the Penman-Monteith approach, and the Bowen ratio approach. Section 3 describes the datasets used in this study. Section 4 offers some insights into the nonparametric approach and compares the estimates with the site observations. Section 5 discusses issues related to the nonparametric approach, and Section 6 provides a conclusion.

2. Methodology

For a simple lumped system, when effects of unsteadiness, ice melt, photosynthesis, and advection can be neglected, the land surface energy balance equation can be written as [3]where is the net radiation, is the soil heat flux, is the sensible heat flux, and is the latent heat flux; () is often called the available energy. For one dimension, sensible and latent heat fluxes are described in terms of flux-gradient relationships [19]:where is the air density (kg/m3), is the specific heat of air at constant pressure (1,013 Jkg−1°C−1), is the psychrometric constant (kPa °C−1), and are the aerodynamic surface and air temperatures (°C), and are the water vapor pressure at the evaporating surface and in the air (kPa), is the aerodynamic resistance (s/m), and is the surface resistance (s/m).

Bowen [10] expressed the Bowen ratio () asThe Bowen ratio can be determined from the profile data of water vapor pressure and air temperature:where and are air temperature and water vapor pressure differences at two heights within the boundary layer. If the available energy is known, the combination of (1) and (4) produces

The Penman-Monteith equation [11, 12] eliminates the aerodynamic surface temperature and yields the following equation:where is the slope of the saturation vapor pressure curve at air temperature (kPa °C−1) and is the saturation water vapor pressure at air temperature (kPa). The main feature of the Penman-Monteith equation is that it requires water vapor pressure, wind speed, and air temperature only at one level. All the parameters have been defined except for the surface resistance, which is to account for the evaporation deficit from unsaturated surfaces. Combining (1), (2), and (7), an expression for the aerodynamic surface temperature can be derived as follows [20]:This equation will be applied to the simulation analysis in the next section.

Liu et al. [18] proposed a nonparametric approach to estimate the actual ET. The derived equations are as follows:where is the ground surface temperature (), which is different from the aerodynamic surface temperature, is the surface emissivity, and is the Stefan-Boltzmann constant. The latent and sensible heat fluxes are functions of air temperature, soil heat flux, and net radiation. More importantly, this approach is relatively simple and all the parameters are measureable. The derivation and more details of this approach can be found in the paper by Liu et al. [18]. There are three terms in (9) and (10) where the first term is generally called equilibrium evaporation (denominated as in the following), the second term (in (10)) is denominated as N-P_ST, and the third term (in (9)) is denominated as N-P_TT in the following.

3. Data Description

Three experiment datasets were collected to evaluate the nonparametric approach. Specifically, data from the SMACEX (Soil Moisture-Atmosphere Coupling Experiment; [21]), WATER (Watershed Allied Telemetry Experimental Research; [22]) and HAPEX-Sahel (Hydrological and Atmospheric Pilot Experiment in the Sahel; [23]) experiments were used in this study. Table 1 lists the characteristics of the reference sites.

3.1. SMACEX

The Soil Moisture-Atmosphere Coupling Experiment was conducted in Iowa, USA, from June 19 through July 9 in 2002 and was designed to provide multiscale dataset of vegetation, soil, and atmospheric states [21, 24]. The primary objectives were to extend microwave soil moisture observations and retrieval algorithms to changing crop biomass conditions and to provide validation data for the Advanced Microwave Scanning Radiometer (AMSR) brightness temperature and soil moisture retrieval algorithms. The land cover in Walnut Creek watershed is primarily composed of corn and soybean. Twelve field sites with eddy covariance (EC) were deployed in the center of the study area. There were 6 corn sites and 6 soybean sites.

The data used in this study were obtained from the WC06 site. The tower was instrumented with sensors for measuring turbulent fluxes of water vapor and sensible heat, as well as net radiation and soil heat flux at 30 min intervals. Additional hydrometeorological observations included wind speed and direction, air temperature, vapor pressure, near-surface soil temperature, and moisture at 10 min intervals. In this study, the hydrometeorological data were resampled to 30 min to be compatible with heat flux measurements. Sensible and latent heat fluxes were adjusted by forcing the energy balance closure using the measured net solar radiation, soil heat flux, and Bowen ratio based on the approach suggested by Twine et al. [25]. The tower-based composite radiometric surface temperature was measured by Apogee infrared thermometers. Su et al. [24] corrected the data and applied them to evaluate the SEBS model. In this study, the correction method proposed by Su et al. [24] was employed.

3.2. WATER

The Watershed Allied Telemetry Experimental Research (WATER) is a simultaneous airborne, satellite-borne, and ground-based remote sensing experiment taking place in the Heihe River Basin, the second largest inland river basin in the arid regions of northwest China. The mission of this experiment was to improve the observability, understanding, and predictability of hydrological and related ecological processes at a catchment scale. A detailed introduction to WATER can be found at http://water.westgis.ac.cn/ or from the paper by Li et al. [22].

The observations from the Yingke station were collected in this study. The site is located in an oasis where the underlying cover is typical irrigated farmland. An Automatic Meteorological Station (AMS), a Soil Moisture and Temperature Measuring System (SMTMS), and an EC system were deployed at this site. Data from July 1 to July 15 in 2008 were collected in this study. Soil heat fluxes were estimated using the Thermal Diffusion Equation and Correction (TDEC) method proposed by Yang and Wang [26]. Surface temperature was estimated from the incoming and outgoing long-wave radiation measured with four component net radiometers. The surface emissivity was assumed to be 0.98 for the corn field. More detailed descriptions of the field observations can be found in the papers by Li et al. [22] and Song et al. [27].

3.3. HAPEX-Sahel

The HAPEX-Sahel experiment was undertaken in Niger, during 1991 and 1992. It aimed at improving the parameterization of land-surface-atmosphere interactions at the Global Circulation Model grid box scale [23]. Three supersites with detailed hydrometeorological studies were deployed in the 1° square experimental domain.

In this study, the bare soil evaporation data collected from the Southern Supersite during the intensive observation period (IOP) in 1992 were used. The latent and sensible heat fluxes were measured with a Bowen ratio system that was very close to the soil surface (0.05 m and 0.20 m). The area was completely bare soil. The system also had a net radiometer and two soil heat plates deployed in the same place. The surface temperature was measured by infrared thermometers operating in the range of 8 to 14 micrometers. Air temperature, wet bulb temperature, wind speed, rainfall, incoming long-wave radiation, incoming shortwave radiation, and reflected solar radiation over bare soil were observed by an automatic weather station. Detailed information on this dataset can be found in the paper by Wallace and Holwill [28]. The period from DOY 260 to 280 of 1992 was chosen in this study. During this time, there was no rainfall and it was the dry season in this area. The surface temperature was corrected with incoming long-wave radiation, and the bare soil emissivity was assumed to be 0.98. The data were obtained from the HAPEX-Sahel information system (http://www.cesbio.ups-tlse.fr/hapex/).

4. Results

4.1. Simulation Analysis

Before the sites evaluation was undertaken, simulation analyses were carried out to compare the results derived from the nonparametric approach, the Penman-Monteith equation, and the Bowen ratio approach. Generally, two kinds of simulation were employed in this study. For the first one, the Penman-Monteith equation was compared with the nonparametric approach. To conduct this analysis, two days’ (DOY 172 and 173) measurements from WC06 were selected. Figure 1 shows the diurnal variation of net radiation, soil heat flux, wind speed, vapor pressure, and air temperature for these two days. The observations included most parameters for the Penman-Monteith equation, except for surface resistance and aerodynamic resistance. To facilitate this analysis, the aerodynamic resistance was estimated using , where represents the wind speed in m/s and is in s/m. This simple equation is often used to estimate the aerodynamic resistance for the reference grass surface [13]. The simulation process is as follows: at first, the surface resistance was set as a constant value; then the latent and sensible heat fluxes can be estimated with the Penman-Monteith equation; subsequently, the aerodynamic surface temperature can be derived from (8); finally, assuming the ground surface temperature was equal to the aerodynamic surface temperature and the surface emissivity is equal to 0.98, the latent and sensible heat fluxes can be estimated based on the nonparametric approach. It is worth noting that the aerodynamic surface temperature is actually different from the ground surface temperature. The difference between the aerodynamic surface temperature and the ground surface temperature is significant over the sparse vegetation area [29, 30]. In this study, it was assumed that this simulation was carried out over dense grassland; therefore, the difference between the two can be neglected. Four scenario analyses were undertaken with the surface resistance set as 0, 100, 500, and 1000 s/m, respectively. Figure 2 presents the comparison between the estimates from Penman-Monteith equation and the surface heat fluxes based on the nonparametric approach. For  s/m, which is for the dense grassland after a rainfall event, the grassland evaporates at the potential rate. The latent heat flux estimated by the Penman-Monteith equation is greater than the nonparametric approach. At the same time, the sensible heat flux estimated with Penman-Monteith is lower than the nonparametric approach. The largest difference between the estimates from the two approaches is about 100 W/m2. For  s/m, this is generally the case for a well-irrigated grassland. The latent and sensible heat fluxes estimated with the two approaches show a good agreement. The surface heat fluxes estimated from two approaches are nearly equal under such conditions, for  s/m, which represents a water-stressed grassland. The latent heat flux estimated by the nonparametric approach is shown to be greater than that from the Penman-Monteith equation. The largest difference is about 120 W/m2. On the contrary, the sensible heat flux based on the nonparametric approach is smaller than the Penman-Monteith-based estimates. For  s/m, which stands for a grassland under a severe drought, the estimates of latent heat flux from the nonparametric approach are shown to be significantly greater than Penman-Monteith-based estimates. Meanwhile, the estimates of sensible heat flux from the nonparametric approach are shown to be much lower than the Penman-Monteith-based estimates. The difference of the latent heat flux derived from the two methods is as large as 160 W/m2. The analyses above indicated the nonparametric approach and the Penman-Monteith equation may have great differences under dry circumstances. For the second one, the Bowen approach was compared with the nonparametric approach. The net radiation, air temperature, soil heat flux, and aerodynamic resistance need to be set at first. The values for net radiation, air temperature, and soil heat flux were set as 450 W/m2, 25°C, and 135 W/m2 based on the measurements at 11:00 am from the WC06 site. The aerodynamic resistance was set as 70 s/m, which is a typical value for grassland. Zhang et al. [31] pointed out that soil moisture availability and the Bowen ratio have a certain relationship. Under the same conditions of net radiation and soil heat flux, high soil moisture availability corresponds to a low Bowen ratio (see Figure 1 in their paper). Assuming the Bowen ratio ranged from 0 to 10 with the step of 0.2, this may represent grasslands under different soil moisture conditions under the same radiation environment. The latent and sensible heat fluxes can be derived based on (6). Similar to the first simulation, the aerodynamic surface temperature was estimated using (8). It is still assumed that the aerodynamic surface temperature is an approximation to the ground surface temperature and the emissivity was set as 0.98, and then the latent and sensible heat fluxes can be derived from the nonparametric approach. Figure 3 presents the comparison of latent heat flux and sensible heat flux derived from the Bowen ratio approach and the nonparametric approach. For a Bowen ratio smaller than 0.6, the latent heat flux derived from the Bowen ratio approach is shown to be greater than that derived from the nonparametric approach. When the Bowen ratio is greater than 0.8, the nonparametric approach-based latent heat flux is continuously larger than the estimates based on the Bowen ratio approach. For the sensible heat flux, the results are completely opposite. When the Bowen ratio is equal to 0.6, the estimates from both approaches are nearly equal. The difference between the two approaches is about 100 W/m2 for the Bowen ratio with 10. Through the two types of simulations above, the results indicates that the nonparametric approach may greatly overestimate latent heat flux under dry conditions.

4.2. Site Evaluation

In this section, the nonparametric approach was evaluated with site observations. The Nash-Sutcliffe coefficient () was used in this study to qualify the model performance. Nash-Sutcliffe coefficient ranges from −inf to 1. Essentially, the closer to 1 it is, the more accurate the model is. Table 2 lists the statistical computations for the estimates based on the nonparametric approach at three different sites. Figure 4 presents the time series comparison of the surface heat fluxes estimated by the nonparametric approach with the measurements from the eddy covariance system at the WC06 site. The WC06 site, located in the central part of the United States, has a climate with a hot, wet summer. The estimates of the latent heat flux were found to have a good agreement with the observations at this site. The nonparametric approach shows a slightly underestimated latent heat flux. There were 844 samples in the comparison; the slope and the intercept of the linear regression between the two were 0.896 and −30.46 W/m2. The mean absolute deviation (MAD) and the root mean square deviation (RMSD) were 50.17 W/m2 and 58.26 W/m2, respectively. The Nash-Sutcliffe coefficient () was 0.9. However, the approach seems to overestimate the sensible heat flux for about 60 W/m2. The was −0.419. The MAD and the RMSD were the same as those for the latent heat flux due to the complementary relationship with the sensible and latent heat fluxes. The corresponding slope and the intercept were 0.844 and 49.17 W/m2.

A further evaluation was undertaken at the Yingke station. The Yingke station is located in the northwest part of China and the climate is dry year-round, with a hot summer and a cold winter. Figure 5 shows a comparison of the surface heat fluxes estimated by the nonparametric approach with the eddy covariance observations at this site. The results indicated that the nonparametric approach can effectively characterize the diurnal variations of the latent and sensible heat fluxes at this site. For the latent heat flux estimates, the slope and intercept of the regression line are 0.799 and 10.41 W/m2. This comparison included 344 samples. The was 0.94. The MAD and RMSD were 35.17 W/m2 and 51.11 W/m2, respectively. For the sensible heat flux estimates, the corresponding slope and the intercept were 0.869 and 21.54 W/m2. The was 0.58. The MAD and RMSD were 30.49 W/m2 and 42.45 W/m2, respectively.

The evaluations above were both carried out in cropland and the evaluations indicated that the nonparametric approach can provide a good estimate of latent heat flux for these conditions. In this part, a further evaluation was undertaken at the Tiger Bush Site, which is covered by bare soil and has a hot and dry climate year-round. Figure 6 presents the time series comparison of the surface heat flux estimates and the observations at this site. It was found that the nonparametric approach would greatly overestimate the latent heat flux. The difference between the estimates and the observations can be as large as 130 W/m2. On the contrary, the nonparametric approach greatly underestimated the sensible heat flux. The statistical computations were listed in Table 2. There were 1441 samples in the comparison. The MAD and the RMSD were 47.07 W/m2 and 67.54 W/m2, respectively. For the LE estimates, the was −9.43. The slope and the intercept of the fitted line were 2.0 and 30.64 W/m2. For the sensible heat flux, the was 0.59; the slope and the intercept were 0.547 and −9.35 W/m2. The statistical computations quantitatively indicated that the nonparametric approach would greatly overestimate LE and underestimate at this site. The simulations in Section 4.1 compared the nonparametric approach with the Penman-Monteith equation and the Bowen ratio approach. The results demonstrated that the nonparametric approach has greater estimates than the Penman-Monteith equation and the Bowen ratio approach under dry conditions. The evaluation at the Tiger Bush Site further confirmed that this approach would greatly overestimate the latent heat flux under dry conditions.

4.3. Comparison between the Equilibrium Evaporation and the Nonparametric Approach

Sections 4.1 and 4.2 evaluated the nonparametric approach with a model simulation and site observations. The results firmly indicated that the nonparametric approach would greatly overestimate ET under dry conditions. Liu et al. [18] evaluated this approach with observations collected from 26 eddy covariance sites and they found an absolute difference of (mean ± standard deviation) W/m2 for latent heat flux. In this study, we also found this approach to provide promising LE estimates for two crop sites, namely, Yingke and WC06 station. Soil moisture may be one of the most important factors that influence the performance of this approach. In this section, the nonparametric approach will be further analyzed. The evaporative fraction, the ratio between LE and available energy , is a good indicator of water availability for evaporation and will be used in the following analysis. To eliminate uneven measurements at night time, the observations between 10:00 and 16:00 (in local time) from all three sites were selected. The difference between ground surface temperature and air temperature (), evaporative fraction, and the three terms (, N-P_ST, and N-P_TT) of the nonparametric approach were computed for every measurement record. Figure 7 shows the scatter plot of evaporative fraction versus () and evaporative fraction versus two terms of the nonparametric approach. There are generally three point clusters in Figure 7(a), which correspond to the measurements from the three sites. For the Tiger Bush Site, the evaporative fraction is smaller than 0.4, and most points located in the range of 0–0.3, indicating low soil moisture availability for evaporation. For the other two sites, the evaporative fraction is greater than 0.65, which indicates ample water for evaporation. () is quiet large in the Tiger Bush Site with small evaporative fraction values, while it shows small values (lower than 4°C) at the Yingke and the WC06 sites with large evaporative fraction values. Figure 7(b) shows N-P_ST and N-P_TT with varying evaporative fraction values. It was found that N-P_ST shows similar point clusters as that in Figure 7(a). For the Tiger Bush Site, N-P_ST ranged from 20 to 140 W/m2. For the Yingke and WC06 sites, N-P_ST was generally smaller than 40 W/m2. N-P_TT, the third term in (9), is smaller than 15 W/m2 at all three sites. This indicates that this term has little function in the nonparametric approach. From the analysis above, it is found that N-P_TT and N-P_ST have relatively small values for wet conditions with high evaporative fraction values. In addition, N-P_TT and N-P_ST have the different signs in (9). This may imply that the nonparametric approach is very close to the equilibrium evaporation equation under wet conditions. The results shown in Figure 8 support this deduction. For the Yingke and WC06 sites, the difference between the estimates from nonparametric approach and the estimates from the equilibrium evaporation was relatively small. However, the difference is relatively large at the Tiger Bush Site which has small evaporative fraction values. Figure 8 provides two other differences, namely, the difference between the estimates from the nonparametric approach and the site observations, as well as the difference between the estimates from the equilibrium evaporation and the site observations. Figure 9 provides the comparison between observed latent heat fluxes with the estimates from the equilibrium evaporation. For the measurements from the Yingke and WC06 sites, most of the points were close to the 1 : 1 line; the slope and the intercept of the fitted line were 1.18 and −11.28 W/m2. This indicated that the equilibrium evaporation is a good approximate for the latent heat flux for the Yingke and WC06 sites with high evaporative fraction values. However, this does not hold for the Tiger Bush Site, which has relatively small evaporative fraction values. The slope and the intercept of the fitted line were 0.083 and 16.66 W/m2. This corresponded to the study by Denmead and McIlroy [32], who suggested that the equilibrium evaporation might be closely approximate to the actual crop evaporation.

5. Discussion

Actual ET estimation has long been a difficult problem for hydrometeorologists. The nonparametric approach proposed by Liu et al. [18] is attractive, because the solution is simple and without parameterization of a transfer coefficient. In our study, the nonparametric approach was evaluated using both model simulation and site observations. The simulation indicated that this approach would greatly overestimate ET under dry conditions. It is worthwhile to note that the simulation analysis may present two minor problems. First, the aerodynamic surface temperature and the ground surface temperature are not equal; this has already been reported by many researchers [29, 30]. However, the difference is not significant over dense cropland. Secondly, the soil heat flux in the simulation analysis was used as a constant value in comparison with the Bowen ratio approach. This may not be realistic in real conditions. The overestimation of the nonparametric approach under dry conditions indicated by the simulation analysis was quite clear, and this was further confirmed by the Tiger Bush Site observations in Section 4.2.

The site evaluations indicated that the nonparametric approach could provide promising estimates for the Yingke and WC06 sites, but it would fail for the Tiger Bush Site, which was relatively dry. Liu et al. [18] evaluated the nonparametric approach with observations from 26 sites and found that this approach worked well at most sites. In 3 of 26 sites, they found that the performance of the nonparametric approach was relatively poor (see Table 2 in their paper). In the analysis of the reason for the bad performance for three sites, they pointed out that these sites had no common features in climate conditions. In this study, both model simulation and in situ evaluation at the Tiger Bush Site reveal that the nonparametric approach would greatly overestimate ET under dry conditions. In addition, Liu et al. [18] pointed out that the performance of the nonparametric approach is comparable to the Penman-Monteith approach and the Bowen ratio approach with 2 site observations. However, the evaluation at the Tiger Bush Site (actual ET observed with the Bowen approach) in this study does not support this statement.

Every term in the nonparametric approach was further analyzed in Section 4.3. It was found that the nonparametric approach is very close to the equilibrium evaporation equation at the Yingke and WC06 sites, as the second term and the third term are relatively small and have different signs to offset each other. However, this is not the case for the Tiger Bush Site, as the actual ET is mainly controlled by limited soil moisture under dry circumstances. In fact, Denmead and McIlroy [32] have suggested that the equilibrium evaporation may serve as a simple measure for actual ET. This suggestion is further supported by many field experiments [3, 33, 34]. A clearer description of this problem can be found in the book by Monteith [20], as cropland usually has moderate surface resistance, and the equilibrium evaporation would be a close approximation of the actual crop evaporation. The scatter plot in Figure 9 also provides a solid support. This may be an implication of the good performance of the nonparametric approach at the 23 sites in Liu’s paper and 2 sites in this paper. The application of the nonparametric approach needs more caution under dry conditions. In addition, it is worthwhile to point out that the deviation of the nonparametric approach needs more thorough investigation, for the third term in the equation has little function.

Soil moisture plays an important role in drylands ecosystems [35]. In drylands, soil moisture plays a dominant role in hydrological processes. Drylands cover more than 40 percent of Earth’s land surface and are inhabited by nearly 40 percent of the world’s population [36]. However, there have still been insufficient observation sites in sparsely vegetated areas. Further research on the drylands hydrological process is imperative.

6. Conclusion

In this study, a critical evaluation of the nonparametric approach was undertaken. Both the model simulation and the site evaluation at Tiger Bush Site indicated that this approach would greatly overestimate ET under dry conditions. However, two crop site evaluations have shown that this approach can achieve good performance. Further analysis revealed that the nonparametric approach is very close to the equilibrium evaporation equation, which approaches the actual ET under wet conditions. In addition, it has been found that the third term has little influence on the results. The evaluations indicate that the application of this approach needs to be cautious and avoided in dry conditions.

Conflict of Interests

The authors declare no conflict of interests.

Authors’ Contribution

Yongmin Yang proposed and developed the research design, paper writing, and results interpretation. Hongbo Su supervised all the work that has been done by the first author and revised the paper extensively. Jianwei Qi did part of the data analysis and revised the paper.

Acknowledgments

The authors are very thankful to the researchers in SMACEX, WATER, and HAPEX-Sahel for the data acquisition and sharing. This work is supported jointly by the Project of National Natural Science Foundation of China (41171286) and the High Resolution Earth Observation System Program of China (no. 08-Y30B07-9001-13/15).