Abstract
We present herein a new basis for measuring river discharge in ungauged
catchments. Surrogate runoff (SR) is created using remotely sensed data
to compensate for the absence of ground streamflow measurements. Because
of their widespread availability, remotely sensed SR products are
attractive, with approaches such as satellite-derived
measurement-calibration ratio (C/M ratio). However, the use of the C/M
ratio suffers from its limited penetration through ground vegetation
canopies. While a microwave signal with a longer wavelength has been
used to enhance the penetration capability, the coarseness of the
spatial resolution of the microwave signal offsets its improvement due
to the inherent assumptions in the C/M ratio, i.e., selecting two
contrasting pixels (i.e., measurement and calibration) at the same time.
To address both issues, this study proposes a new SR formulation using a
longer wavelength (L-band microwave) with a better assumption for
handling coarse grids, whereby the temporal variability of dryness
against the driest state in each grid is used. The performance of the
new SR is assessed for 467 Australian Hydrologic Reference Station
catchments. Results show considerable improvements in the Pearson linear
correlation (R) between the proposed SR and streamflow: 44% of the
study areas show R higher than 0.4 with the new approach, whereas only
13% of the study areas show R higher than 0.4 with the currently used
alternative (C/M ratio derived from Ka-band microwave). Overall, the
resulting SR is dramatically improved by using the newly designed SR
approach with the L-band microwave signal.