ISSN:
1573-5052
Source:
Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
Topics:
Biology
Notes:
Abstract Using a state-of-the-art land surface model in a ‘stand-alone’ mode with prescribed atmospheric forcing, a method for retaining the spatial extent and intensity of precipitation in Atmospheric General Circulation Models (AGCMs) is investigated. It is shown that the surface climatology simulated by this model is strongly dependent upon the fraction of the grid square, μ, receiving precipitation. It is also shown that fundamentally different hydrological regimes (one runoff dominated, the other evaporation dominated) are obtained for the otherwise identical situations. It is argued that the new generation of land surface models which explicitly incorporate vegetation may have to be ‘re-tuned’ if differences between large-scale and small-scale precipitation events are accommodated in AGCMs. If precipitation is always assumed to fall uniformly over the grid square, the precipitation intensity will generally be underestimated. This will lead to an overestimation of canopy interception and interception loss. Furthermore, too little precipitation will reach the soil surface, and therefore surface runoff and the soil moisture will be underestimated. With too much interception loss, and too little soil water (and soil evaporation) there will be a tendency to re-cycle precipitation back to the atmosphere too quickly, leading to the unrealistic simulation of surface-atmosphere interactions. These results, if reproduced within an AGCM, would invalidate previous simulations of the effects of changing the state of the land surface on the atmosphere.
Type of Medium:
Electronic Resource
URL:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF00036052
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