613 research outputs found
Propagation of soil moisture memory to streamflow and evapotranspiration in Europe
As a key variable of the land-climate system soil moisture is a main driver of streamflow and evapotranspiration under certain conditions. Soil moisture furthermore exhibits outstanding memory (persistence) characteristics. Many studies also report distinct low frequency variations for streamflow, which are likely related to soil moisture memory. Using data from over 100 near-natural catchments located across Europe, we investigate in this study the connection between soil moisture memory and the respective memory of streamflow and evapotranspiration on different time scales. For this purpose we use a simple water balance model in which dependencies of runoff (normalised by precipitation) and evapotranspiration (normalised by radiation) on soil moisture are fitted using streamflow observations. The model therefore allows us to compute the memory characteristics of soil moisture, streamflow and evapotranspiration on the catchment scale. We find considerable memory in soil moisture and streamflow in many parts of the continent, and evapotranspiration also displays some memory at monthly time scale in some catchments. We show that the memory of streamflow and evapotranspiration jointly depend on soil moisture memory and on the strength of the coupling of streamflow and evapotranspiration to soil moisture. Furthermore, we find that the coupling strengths of streamflow and evapotranspiration to soil moisture depend on the shape of the fitted dependencies and on the variance of the meteorological forcing. To better interpret the magnitude of the respective memories across Europe, we finally provide a new perspective on hydrological memory by relating it to the mean duration required to recover from anomalies exceeding a certain threshold
Modeling land-climate coupling in Europe: Impact of land surface representation on climate variability and extremes
Land-climate coupling has been shown to be important for European summer climate variability and extreme events. However, the sensitivity of these feedbacks to land surface model (LSM) choice has been little investigated up to now. In this study, we assess the impact of the LSM on the simulated climate variability in a regional climate model (RCM). The experiments were conducted with the COSMO-CLM2RCM. COSMO-CLM2can be run with two alternative LSMs, the 2nd-generation LSM TERRA_ML or the more sophisticated 3rd-generation LSM Community Land Model (CLM3.5). The analyzed simulations include control and sensitivity experiments with prescribed soil moisture (dry or wet). Using CLM3.5 instead of TERRA_ML improves the simulated temperature variability by alleviating an overestimation of temperature inter-annual variability in the RCM. Also, the representation of the probability density functions of daily maximum summer temperature is improved when using the more advanced LSM. The reduced climate variability is linked to a larger ground heat flux and smaller variability in soil moisture and short-wave radiation. The latter effect results from the coupling of the LSM to the atmospheric module. In addition, using CLM3.5 reduces the sensitivity of COSMO-CLM2to extreme soil moisture conditions. An analysis assessing the relationship between the standard precipitation index and the subsequent number of hot days in summer reveals a better representation of this relationship using CLM3.5. Hence, we find that biases in climate variability and extremes can be reduced and the representation of land-climate coupling can be improved with the use of the more sophisticated LSM
DISTRIBUTION OF Zanthium indicum AROUND GIRITALE TANK
The area around Giritale tank is the main grazing ground of wild and domestic animalswithin the naturc reserve and thcre has been an increase in the population of Xanthiuntitulicurn (Agada) in this area. In the Flora of Ceylon Trimen recorded this as a rare plantprohably introduced from India. Today, it is reported to be present in more than 7 districtsof the country, mostly in moist areas periodically inundated. It reduces the grazingcapacity and the hooked involucres are reported to cause damage to the internal organs ofthe grazers. Studies are heing carried out to find the distribution and suitable controlmeasures.Area around the tank was sampled at 100m intervals. The plant is capable of producingflowers and fruits irrespective of the time of the year and the size of the plant. When lessthan .'i()(Yr; of the area was covered hy the plant the abundance was taken, as low and whcnit was more than .'i0%, as high. .'i3% of the total area has been identified as highabundance and only 9% as freeThe species has already spread from the edge of water towards the forest. Although thefruits are found, the plant has not established in the forest. Soil moisture, texture and thelight intensity determine the growth of this plant. Fruits get embedded in the mud andalter decomposition two achenes arc released which germinate later. There are reports ofXcmtliitun sp. producing two types of achencs, germinating in consecutive years. Studiesarc heing carried out to investigate this.To improve the grazing capacity of the area it is necessary to control the growth of thisplant. Controlled hurning seems to he the best. Ten other species have heen recordedgrowing with Agada. Crotalaria pallida competes with X. lndicum. reducing itspopulation. The possibility of use of Cuscuta chinensis in the control of Xanthiumindicum is being tested.
European drought trends
Recent climate projections suggest pronounced changes in European drought
frequency. In the north, increased precipitation volumes are likely to
reduce drought occurrence, whereas more frequent droughts are expected for
southern Europe. To assess whether this pattern of changes
in drought frequency can already be identified for the past
decades, we analyse trends in a recently developed pan-European drought
climatology that is based on the Standardized Precipitation Index (SPI). The
index is derived on multiple time scales, ranging from 1 to 36 months, which
allows the assessment of trends in both short term and multi-year droughts.
Trends are quantified using the Theil-Sen trend estimator combined with an
extension of the MannâKendal test (p < 0.05) that accounts for
serial correlation. Field significance is assessed on the basis of
techniques that control the false discovery rate in a multiple testing
setting. The trend analysis indicates that changes in drought frequency are
more pronounced on time scales of one year and longer. The analysis also
reveals that there has been a tendency for decreased drought frequency in
northern Europe in the past decades, whereas droughts have likely become
more frequent in selected southern regions
Can climateâeffective land management reduce regional warming?
Limiting global warming to well below 2°C is an imminent challenge for humanity. However, even if this global target can be met, some regions are still likely to experience substantial warming relative to others. Using idealized global climate simulations, we examine the potential of land management options in affecting regional climate, with a focus on crop albedo enhancement and irrigation (climate-effective land management). The implementation is performed over all crop regions globally to provide an upper bound. We find that the implementation of both crop albedo enhancement and irrigation can reduce hot temperature extremes by more than 2°C in North America, Eurasia, and India over the 21st century relative to a scenario without management application. The efficacy of crop albedo enhancement scales with the magnitude, where a cooling response exceeding 0.5°C for hot temperature extremes was achieved with a large (i.e., â„0.08) change in crop albedo. Regional differences were attributed to the surface energy balance response with temperature changes mostly explained by latent heat flux changes for irrigation and net shortwave radiation changes for crop albedo enhancement. However, limitations do exist, where we identify warming over the winter months when climate-effective land management is temporarily suspended. This was associated with persistent cloud cover that enhances longwave warming. It cannot be confirmed if the magnitude of this feedback is reproducible in other climate models. Our results overall demonstrate that regional warming of hot extremes in our climate model can be partially mitigated when using an idealized treatment of climate-effective land management
A theoretical approach to assess soil moistureâclimate coupling across CMIP5 and GLACE-CMIP5 experiments
Terrestrial climate is influenced by various landâatmosphere interactions
that involve numerous land surface state variables. In several regions on
Earth, soil moisture plays an important role for climate via its control
on the partitioning of net radiation into sensible and latent heat fluxes;
consequently, soil moisture also impacts on temperature and precipitation.
The Global LandâAtmosphere Coupling ExperimentâCoupled Model Intercomparison Project phase 5 (GLACE-CMIP5) aims
to quantify the impact of soil moisture on these important climate variables
and to trace the individual coupling mechanisms. GLACE-CMIP5 provides
experiments with different soil moisture prescriptions that can be used to
isolate the effect of soil moisture on climate. Using a theoretical framework
that relies on the distinct relation of soil moisture with evaporative
fraction (the ratio of latent heat flux over net radiation) in different soil
moisture regimes, the climate impact of the soil moisture prescriptions in
the GLACE-CMIP5 experiments can be emulated and quantified. The
framework-based estimation of the soil moisture effect on the evaporative
fraction agrees very well with estimations obtained directly from the
GLACE-CMIP5 experiments (pattern correlation of 0.85). Moreover, the soil
moisture effect on the daily maximum temperature is well captured in regions
where soil moisture exerts a strong control on latent heat fluxes. The
theoretical approach is further applied to quantify the soil moisture
contribution to the projected change of the temperature on the hottest day of
the year, confirming recent estimations by other studies. Finally,
GLACE-style soil moisture prescriptions are emulated in an extended set of
CMIP5 models. The results indicate consistency between the soil
moistureâclimate coupling strength estimated with the GLACE-CMIP5 and the
CMIP5 models. Although the theoretical approach is only designed to capture
the local soil moistureâclimate coupling strength, it can also help to
distinguish non-local from local soil moistureâatmosphere feedbacks where
sensitivity experiments (such as GLACE-CMIP5) are available. Overall, the
theoretical framework-based approach presented here constitutes a simple and
powerful tool to quantify local soil moistureâclimate coupling in both the
GLACE-CMIP5 and CMIP5 models that can be applied in the absence of dedicated
sensitivity experiments.</p
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Models agree on forced response pattern of precipitation and temperature extremes
Model projections of heavy precipitation and temperature extremes include large uncertainties. We demonstrate that the disagreement between individual simulations primarily arises from internal variability, whereas models agree remarkably well on the forced signal, the change in the absence of internal variability. Agreement is high on the spatial pattern of the forced heavy precipitation response showing an intensification over most land regions, in particular Eurasia and North America. The forced response of heavy precipitation is even more robust than that of annual mean precipitation. Likewise, models agree on the forced response pattern of hot extremes showing the greatest intensification over midlatitudinal land regions. Thus, confidence in the forced changes of temperature and precipitation extremes in response to a certain warming is high. Although in reality internal variability will be superimposed on that pattern, it is the forced response that determines the changes in temperature and precipitation extremes in a risk perspective
Varying soil moistureâatmosphere feedbacks explain divergent temperature extremes and precipitation projections in central Europe
The frequency and intensity of climate extremes is expected to increase in
many regions due to anthropogenic climate change. In central Europe extreme
temperatures are projected to change more strongly than global mean
temperatures, and soil moistureâtemperature feedbacks significantly contribute
to this regional amplification. Because of their strong societal, ecological
and economic impacts, robust projections of temperature extremes are needed.
Unfortunately, in current model projections, temperature extremes in central
Europe are prone to large uncertainties. In order to understand and
potentially reduce the uncertainties of extreme temperature projections in
Europe, we analyze global climate models from the CMIP5 (Coupled Model
Intercomparison Project Phase 5) ensemble for the
business-as-usual high-emission scenario (RCP8.5). We find a divergent
behavior in long-term projections of summer precipitation until the end of
the 21st century, resulting in a trimodal distribution of
precipitation (wet, dry and very dry). All model
groups show distinct characteristics for the summer latent heat flux, top soil
moisture and temperatures on the hottest day of the year (TXx), whereas for
net radiation and large-scale circulation no clear trimodal behavior is
detectable. This suggests that different landâatmosphere coupling strengths
may be able to explain the uncertainties in temperature extremes.
Constraining the full model ensemble with observed present-day correlations
between summer precipitation and TXx excludes most of the very dry
and dry models. In particular, the very dry models tend to
overestimate the negative coupling between precipitation and TXx, resulting
in a warming that is too strong. This is particularly relevant for global warming
levels above 2 °C. For the first time, this analysis allows for the substantial reduction of
uncertainties in the projected changes of TXx in global
climate models. Our results suggest that long-term temperature changes in TXx
in central Europe are about 20 % lower than those projected by the multi-model
median of the full ensemble. In addition, mean summer precipitation is found
to be more likely to stay close to present-day levels. These results are
highly relevant for improving estimates of regional climate-change impacts
including heat stress, water supply and crop failure for central Europe.</p
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