Land surface conductance linked to precipitation: Co‐evolution of vegetation and climate in Earth system models

Author:

Franks Peter J.1ORCID,Herold Nicholas1,Bonan Gordon B.2,Oleson Keith W.2,Dukes Jeffrey S.3,Huber Matthew4,Schroeder Julian I.5,Cox Peter M.6,Jones Simon6

Affiliation:

1. School of Life and Environmental Sciences The University of Sydney Sydney New South Wales Australia

2. National Center for Atmospheric Research Boulder Colorado USA

3. Department of Global Ecology Carnegie Institution for Science Stanford California USA

4. Department of Earth, Atmosphere and Planetary Sciences Purdue University West Lafayette Indiana USA

5. Cell and Developmental Biology Department University of California San Diego San Diego California USA

6. Department of Mathematics and Statistics University of Exeter Exeter UK

Abstract

AbstractVegetation and precipitation are known to fundamentally influence each other. However, this interdependence is not fully represented in climate models because the characteristics of land surface (canopy) conductance to water vapor and CO2 are determined independently of precipitation. Working within a coupled atmosphere and land modelling framework (CAM6/CLM5; coupled Community Atmosphere Model v6/Community Land Model v5), we have developed a new theoretical approach to characterizing land surface conductance by explicitly linking its dynamic properties to local precipitation, a robust proxy for moisture available to vegetation. This will enable regional surface conductance characteristics to shift fluidly with climate change in simulations, consistent with general principles of co‐evolution of vegetation and climate. Testing within the CAM6/CLM5 framework shows that climate simulations incorporating the new theory outperform current default configurations across several error metrics for core output variables when measured against observational data. In climate simulations for the end of this century the new, adaptive stomatal conductance scheme provides a revised prognosis for average and extreme temperatures over several large regions, with increased primary productivity through central and east Asia, and higher rainfall through North Africa and the Middle East. The new projections also reveal more frequent heatwaves than originally estimated for the south‐eastern US and sub‐Saharan Africa but less frequent heatwaves across east Europe and northeast Asia. These developments have implications for evaluating food security and risks from extreme temperatures in areas that are vulnerable to climate change.

Funder

Human Frontier Science Program

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

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