We have just submitted a new paper — A flexible open-source modular framework for ecohydrological modeling: Application and validation of GEOSPACE-1D — by Concetta D'Amato, Paolo Benettin, Andrea Rinaldo, and Riccardo Rigon. It is the natural companion and follow-up to the GEOSPACE framework paper published in Geoscientific Model Development earlier this year, which described the design principles and modular architecture of GEOSPACE. That paper introduced the framework; this one puts it to work.
The validation is built around the "Spike II" experiment, a carefully instrumented lysimeter study carried out in 2018 on the EPFL campus in Lausanne. Four soil columns — a willow tree (L2), two grass-covered lysimeters (L1 and L4), and a bare-soil system (L3) — were monitored over two months, providing high-quality weight-based evapotranspiration estimates alongside measurements of soil water content, pressure, and drainage. These data allow a thorough assessment of the model across contrasting vegetation types and soil configurations.
The core of the paper addresses three questions: Can GEOSPACE reproduce observed ecohydrological dynamics across such diverse conditions? What are the practical advantages of its modular structure? And does it enable novel analyses — the kind that open new scientific doors rather than merely close validation loops?
On performance: GEOSPACE reproduces soil water pressure dynamics, depth-resolved water content, bottom drainage, and evapotranspiration fluxes across all four lysimeters with R² values of 0.87, 0.81, 0.83, and 0.73 for L2, L1, L4, and L3 respectively. Mean residual biases are negligible throughout. The slightly lower performance over bare soil reflects a known structural limitation of the Penman–Monteith formulation for soil evaporation under conditions where thermal inertia matters — an honest diagnosis rather than a defect to be papered over.
On modularity: the willow lysimeter was simulated with three alternative evapotranspiration formulations — GEOET-Prospero-PM, GEOET-Priestley-Taylor, and GEOET-Penman-Monteith FAO — keeping the soil component (WHETGEO) and the partitioning solver (BrokerGEO) identical across all three runs. All formulations close the cumulative water balance (~600 mm over the experiment), but the Prospero-PM formulation captures sub-daily peak dynamics with roughly half the residual spread of the other two. The calibrated Priestley-Taylor α = 4.16 and FAO Kc = 3.9 — both well above standard values — are informative precisely because they expose structural limitations of simplified formulations when applied to a high-transpiration system dominated by stomatal control.
On novel capabilities: the model computes root water uptake (RWU) for every control volume at every time step, yielding a full depth–time distribution of uptake intensity. The willow shifts its water sourcing dynamically in response to moisture depletion and atmospheric demand, with the mean uptake depth varying over time in a way that closely mirrors the measured root density profile. This kind of depth-resolved diagnostic is directly relevant to isotope-based ecohydrology, where xylem water provides only a bulk integrated signal — GEOSPACE's spatial resolution of the RWU can help interpret what that bulk signal actually means.
The paper grew out of Concetta D'Amato's PhD work at the Center Agriculture Food Environment (C3A) at the University of Trento, supported by the WATZON COST Action and the PRIN 2017 WATZON project. Readers interested in the longer history of GEOSPACE and its components can find much of the background documented here on AboutHydrology: see the posts on GEOSPACE and WHETGEO, and in particular the earlier post on Concetta's PhD thesis and the exploration of the SPAC.
The source code is on GitHub at https://github.com/geoframecomponents/GEOSPACE-1D, with a frozen version on Zenodo. All simulation data are openly available. GEOSPACE continues to grow.
Waiting for the official preprint, you can download it here. Here instead, find the supplemental material.


