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ARS Home » Plains Area » Las Cruces, New Mexico » Range Management Research » Research » Publications at this Location » Publication #259903

Title: Sensitivity of the snowmelt runoff model to underestimates of remotely sensed snow covered area

Author
item STEELE, CAITI - New Mexico State University
item Rango, Albert
item HALL, DOROTHY - Goddard Space Flight Center
item BLEIWEISS, MAX - New Mexico State University

Submitted to: IEEE IGARSS Annual Proceedings
Publication Type: Proceedings
Publication Acceptance Date: 7/15/2010
Publication Date: 7/25/2010
Citation: Steele, C., Rango, A., Hall, D., Bleiweiss, M. 2010. Sensitivity of the snowmelt runoff model to underestimates of remotely sensed snow covered area [abstract]. 2010 IEEE Interntional Symposium on Geoscience and Remote Sensing, July 25-30, 2010, Honolulu, Hawaii. WEP2.PL.10.

Interpretive Summary:

Technical Abstract: Three methods for estimating snow covered area (SCA) from Terra MODIS data were used to derive conventional depletion curves for input to the Snowmelt Runoff Model (SRM). We compared the MOD10 binary and fractional snow cover products and a method for estimating sub-pixel snow cover using spectral mixture analysis (SMA). All three methods underestimated SCA and this contributed to underestimates in runoff modeled by SRM. The closest relationship between measured and computed runoff was achieved when SRM was run with conventional depletion curves derived from the MODIS binary snow cover product (R2 = 0.91). Although the MODIS fractional snow cover product and SMA did not perform as well as the binary snow cover product (R2 = 0.70 and R2 = 0.72 respectively) we anticipate that either of these methods may be reworked to better account for forest cover in our study area and so improve SCA estimates.