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Dive into the research topics where Carl L. Unkrich is active.

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Featured researches published by Carl L. Unkrich.


Agricultural and Forest Meteorology | 2000

Seasonal estimates of riparian evapotranspiration using remote and in situ measurements

David C. Goodrich; Russell L. Scott; Jiaguo Qi; B. Goff; Carl L. Unkrich; M.S Moran; David G. Williams; Sean M. Schaeffer; Keirith A. Snyder; R MacNish; Thomas Maddock; D. Pool; A. Chehbouni; D. I. Cooper; William E. Eichinger; William James Shuttleworth; Yann Kerr; R. Marsett; W. Ni

In many semi-arid basins during extended periods when surface snowmelt or storm runoff is absent, groundwater constitutes the primary water source for human habitation, agriculture and riparian ecosystems. Utilizing regional groundwater models in the management of these water resources requires accurate estimates of basin boundary conditions. A critical groundwater boundary condition that is closely coupled to atmospheric processes and is typically known with little certainty is seasonal riparian evapotranspiration (ET). This quantity can often be a significant factor in the basin water balance in semi-arid regions yet is very difficult to estimate over a large area. Better understanding and quantification of seasonal, large-area riparian ET is a primary objective of the Semi-Arid Land-Surface-Atmosphere (SALSA) Program. To address this objective, a series of interdisciplinary experimental campaigns were conducted in 1997 in the San Pedro Basin in southeastern Arizona. The riparian system in this basin is primarily made up of three vegetation communities: mesquite (Prosopis velutina), sacaton grasses (Sporobolus wrightii), and a cottonwood (Populus fremontii)/willow (Salix goodingii) forest gallery. Micrometeorological measurement techniques were used to estimate ET from the mesquite and grasses. These techniques could not be utilized to estimate fluxes from the cottonwood/willow (C/W) forest gallery due to the height (20‐30 m) and non-uniform linear nature of the forest gallery. Short-term (2‐4 days) sap flux measurements were made to estimate canopy transpiration over several periods of the riparian growing season. Simultaneous remote sensing measurements were used to spatially extrapolate tree and stand measurements. Scaled C/W stand level sap flux estimates were utilized to calibrate a Penman‐Monteith model to enable temporal extrapolation between synoptic measurement periods. With this model and set of measurements, seasonal riparian vegetation water use estimates for the riparian corridor were obtained. To validate these models, a 90-day pre-monsoon water balance over a 10 km section of the river was carried out. All components of the water balance, including riparian ET, were


Water Resources Research | 1994

Runoff simulation sensitivity to remotely sensed initial soil water content

David C. Goodrich; T. Schmugge; Thomas J. Jackson; Carl L. Unkrich; T. O. Keefer; R. Parry; L. B. Bach; S. A. Amer

A variety of aircraft remotely sensed and conventional ground-based measurements of volumetric soil water content (SW) were made over two subwatersheds (4.4 and 631 ha) of the U.S. Department of Agricultures Agricultural Research Service Walnut Gulch experimental watershed during the 1990 monsoon season. Spatially distributed soil water contents estimated remotely from the NASA push broom microwave radiometer (PBMR), an Institute of Radioengineering and Electronics (IRE) multifrequency radiometer, and three ground-based point methods were used to define prestorm initial SW for a distributed rainfall-runoff model (KINEROS; Woolhiser et al., 1990) at a small catchment scale (4.4 ha). At a medium catchment scale (631 ha or 6.31 km2) spatially distributed PBMR SW data were aggregated via stream order reduction. The impacts of the various spatial averages of SW on runoff simulations are discussed and are compared to runoff simulations using SW estimates derived from a simple daily water balance model. It was found that at the small catchment scale the SW data obtained from any of the measurement methods could be used to obtain reasonable runoff predictions. At the medium catchment scale, a basin-wide remotely sensed average of initial water content was sufficient for runoff simulations. This has important implications for the possible use of satellite-based microwave soil moisture data to define prestorm SW because the low spatial resolutions of such sensors may not seriously impact runoff simulations under the conditions examined. However, at both the small and medium basin scale, adequate resources must be devoted to proper definition of the input rainfall to achieve reasonable runoff simulations.


Water Resources Research | 2008

Understanding uncertainty in distributed flash flood forecasting for semiarid regions

Soni Yatheendradas; Thorsten Wagener; Hoshin V. Gupta; Carl L. Unkrich; David C. Goodrich; Mike Schaffner; Anne Stewart

Semiarid flash floods pose a significant danger for life and property in many dry regions around the world. One effective way to mitigate flood risk lies in implementing a real-time forecast and warning system based on a rainfall-runoff model. This study used a semiarid, physics-based, and spatially distributed watershed model driven by high-resolution radar rainfall input to evaluate such a system. The predictive utility of the model and dominant sources of uncertainty were investigated for several runoff events within the U.S. Department of Agriculture Agricultural Research Service Walnut Gulch Experimental Watershed located in the southwestern United States. Sources of uncertainty considered were rainfall estimates, watershed model parameters, and initial soil moisture conditions. Results derived through a variance-based comprehensive global sensitivity analysis indicated that the high predictive uncertainty in the modeled response was heavily dominated by biases in the radar rainfall depth estimates. Key model parameters and initial model states were identified, and we generally found that modeled hillslope characteristics are more influential than channel characteristics in small semiarid basins. We also observed an inconsistency in the parameter sets identified as behavioral for different events, which suggests that model calibration to historical data is unlikely to consistently improve predictive performance for different events and that real-time parameter updating may be preferable.


Agricultural and Forest Meteorology | 2000

Preface paper to the Semi-Arid Land-Surface-Atmosphere (SALSA) Program special issue.

David C. Goodrich; A. Chehbouni; B. Goff; B. MacNish; Thomas Maddock; S. Moran; William James Shuttleworth; David G. Williams; C. Watts; L.H. Hipps; D. I. Cooper; J. Schieldge; Yann Kerr; Hector Arias; M. Kirkland; R. Carlos; P. Cayrol; William G. Kepner; B. Jones; Roni Avissar; A. Bégué; Jean-Marc Bonnefond; G. Boulet; B. Branan; J.P. Brunel; L.C. Chen; T. Clarke; M.R. Davis; H. DeBruin; G. Dedieu

The Semi-Arid Land-Surface-Atmosphere Program (SALSA) is a multi-agency, multi-national research effort that seeks to evaluate the consequences of natural and human-induced environmental change in semi-arid regions. The ultimate goal of SALSA is to advance scientific understanding of the semi-arid portion of the hydrosphere-biosphere interface in order to provide reliable information for environmental decision making. SALSA approaches this goal through a program of long-term, integrated observations, process research, modeling, assessment, and information management that is sustained by cooperation among scientists and information users. In this preface to the SALSA special issue, general program background information and the critical nature of semi-arid regions is presented. A brief description of the Upper San Pedro River Basin, the initial location for focused SALSA research follows. Several overarching research objectives under which much of the interdisciplinary research contained in the special issue was undertaken are discussed. Principal methods, primary research sites and data collection used by numerous investigators during 1997-1999 are then presented. Scientists from about 20 US, five European (four French and one Dutch), and three Mexican agencies and institutions have collaborated closely to make the research leading to this special issue a reality. The SALSA Program has served as a model of interagency cooperation by breaking new ground in the approach to large scale interdisciplinary science with relatively limited resources.


Agricultural and Forest Meteorology | 2000

Estimation of heat and momentum fluxes over complex terrain using a large aperture scintillometer.

A. Chehbouni; Christopher J. Watts; Jean-Pierre Lagouarde; Yann Kerr; J.-C. Rodriguez; Jean-Marc Bonnefond; F. Santiago; Gérard Dedieu; David C. Goodrich; Carl L. Unkrich

A comprehensive experimental plan has been designed to further investigate the potential and the limitations associated with the use of a large aperture scintillometer (LAS) to infer path average sensible and momentum fluxes over complex surfaces as part of the Semi-Arid Land-Surface-Atmosphere (SALSA) Program. The complexity of the terrain is associated with the type and the cover of the vegetation canopy as well as with changes in topography. Scintillometer based estimates of sensible heat flux and friction velocity are compared to those measured by eddy correlation systems over a grassland patch, a mesquite patch, and over a transect spanning both patches. The results show that considering the complexity of the surface, the overall performance of the scintillometer is relatively good.


Transactions of the ASABE | 2012

KINEROS2-AGWA: Model Use, Calibration, and Validation

D. C. Goodrich; I. S. Burns; Carl L. Unkrich; Darius J. Semmens; D.P. Guertin; Mariano Hernandez; S. Yatheendradas; Jeffrey R. Kennedy; Lainie R. Levick

KINEROS (KINematic runoff and EROSion) originated in the 1960s as a distributed event-based model that conceptualizes a watershed as a cascade of overland flow model elements that flow into trapezoidal channel model elements. KINEROS was one of the first widely available watershed models that interactively coupled a finite difference approximation of the kinematic overland flow equations to a physically based infiltration model. Development and improvement of KINEROS continued from the 1960s on a variety of projects for a range of purposes, which has resulted in a suite of KINEROS-based modeling tools. This article focuses on KINEROS2 (K2), a spatially distributed, event-based watershed rainfall-runoff and erosion model, and the companion ArcGIS-based Automated Geospatial Watershed Assessment (AGWA) tool. AGWA automates the time-consuming tasks of watershed delineation into distributed model elements and initial parameterization of these elements using commonly available, national GIS data layers. A variety of approaches have been used to calibrate and validate K2 successfully across a relatively broad range of applications (e.g., urbanization, pre- and post-fire, hillslope erosion, erosion from roads, runoff and recharge, and manure transport). The case studies presented in this article (1) compare lumped to stepwise calibration and validation of runoff and sediment at plot, hillslope, and small watershed scales; and (2) demonstrate an uncalibrated application to address relative change in watershed response to wildfire.


Catena | 1999

Simulation of selected events on the Catsop catchment by KINEROS2 A report for the GCTE conference on catchment scale erosion models

Roger E. Smith; David C. Goodrich; Carl L. Unkrich

Abstract Data from the Catsop catchment in South Limburg, Netherlands was simulated with the model KINEROS2. The results of calibration and validation on a split set of runoff and sediment data are reported and the variations in apparent parameters are analyzed. Calibration was performed with regard to the temporal distribution of runoff and sediment rather than single values such as total or peak rates. Based on the simulations, soil erodibility was considerably higher in 1993 than earlier years. Sediment discharge is quite sensitive to hydrologic simulation, as the amount and velocity of runoff affects sediment transport capacity which in turn determines the delivery of soil disturbed by rainsplash. Overall ability of the model to reproduce the measured data was considered relatively good.


Eos, Transactions American Geophysical Union | 2007

Impact of recent extreme Arizona storms

Christopher S. Magirl; Robert H. Webb; Peter G. Griffiths; Mike Schaffner; Craig Shoemaker; Eric Pytlak; Soni Yatheendradas; Steve W. Lyon; Peter Troch; Sharon L. E. Desilets; D. C. Goodrich; Carl L. Unkrich; Ann Youberg; Phil A. Pearthree

Heavy rainfall on 27–31 July 2006 led to record flooding and triggered an historically unprecedented number of debris flows in the Santa Catalina Mountains north of Tucson, Ariz. The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) documented record floods along four watercourses in the Tucson basin, and at least 250 hillslope failures spawned damaging debris flows in an area where less than 10 small debris flows had been documented in the past 25 years. At least 18 debris flows destroyed infrastructure in the heavily used Sabino Canyon Recreation Area (http://wwwpaztcn.wr.usgs.gov/rsch_highlight/articles/20061 l.html). In four adjacent canyons, debris flows reached the heads of alluvial fans at the boundary of the Tucson metropolitan area. While landuse planners in southeastern Arizona evaluate the potential threat of this previously little recognized hazard to residents along the mountain front, an interdisciplinary group of scientists has collaborated to better understand this extreme event.


Agricultural and Forest Meteorology | 2000

Comparison of riparian evapotranspiration estimates based on a water balance approach and sap flow measurements

R.D. Mac Nish; Carl L. Unkrich; Evelyn Smythe; David C. Goodrich; Thomas Maddock

Estimates of evapotranspiration (ET) from riparian vegetation along a 122 m reach of the San Pedro River using both a water balance approach and by scaling up sap flow measurements are compared. A sensitivity analysis was performed on the components of the water balance to assess the effects of measurement errors on estimates of ET using this method. It was concluded that by reducing the error in three key components to less than 5%, riparian ET could be estimated to an accuracy of 20-25% using the water balance method. The analysis also indicated that random measurement errors up to 10% in the water balance measurements would explain the difference between the water balance and sap flow ET estimates. Demonstrating agreement given reasonable error bounds provides confidence in the accuracy of both methods.


Journal of Hydrometeorology | 2012

Assessing Satellite-Based Rainfall Estimates in Semiarid Watersheds Using the USDA-ARS Walnut Gulch Gauge Network and TRMM PR

Eyal Amitai; Carl L. Unkrich; David C. Goodrich; Emad Habib; Bryson Thill

AbstractThe rain gauge network associated with the Walnut Gulch Experimental Watershed (WGEW) in southeastern Arizona provides a unique opportunity for direct comparisons of in situ measurements and satellite-based instantaneous rain rate estimates like those from the Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM) precipitation radar (PR). The WGEW network is the densest rain gauge network in the PR coverage area for watersheds greater than 10 km2. It consists of 88 weighing rain gauges within a 149-km2 area. On average, approximately 10 gauges can be found in each PR field of view (~5-km diameter). All gauges are very well synchronized with 1-min reporting intervals. This allows generating very-high-temporal-resolution rain rate fields and obtaining accurate estimates of the area-average rain rate for the entire watershed and for a single PR field of view. In this study, instantaneous rain rate fields from the PR and the spatially interpolated gauge measurements (on a 100 m × 100 m grid, updated every 1 min)...

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David C. Goodrich

Agricultural Research Service

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D. C. Goodrich

United States Department of Agriculture

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Soni Yatheendradas

Goddard Space Flight Center

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Mary H. Nichols

Agricultural Research Service

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T. O. Keefer

United States Department of Agriculture

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Russell L. Scott

Agricultural Research Service

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William G. Kepner

United States Environmental Protection Agency

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