Water Balance in the Amazon Basin from a Land Surface Model Ensemble

Author:

Getirana Augusto C. V.1,Dutra Emanuel2,Guimberteau Matthieu3,Kam Jonghun4,Li Hong-Yi5,Decharme Bertrand6,Zhang Zhengqiu7,Ducharne Agnes8,Boone Aaron6,Balsamo Gianpaolo2,Rodell Matthew1,Toure Ally M.1,Xue Yongkang9,Peters-Lidard Christa D.1,Kumar Sujay V.1,Arsenault Kristi1,Drapeau Guillaume10,Ruby Leung L.5,Ronchail Josyane11,Sheffield Justin4

Affiliation:

1. Hydrological Sciences Laboratory, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Maryland

2. ECMWF, Reading, United Kingdom

3. L’Institut Pierre-Simon Laplace/CNRS, Paris, France

4. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey

5. Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Richland, Washington

6. CNRM-GAME, Météo-France, Toulouse, France

7. University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California, and Chinese Academy of Meteorological Sciences, Beijing, China

8. L’Institut Pierre-Simon Laplace/CNRS, and UMR METIS, CNRS/Université Pierre et Marie Curie, Paris, France

9. University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California

10. Université Paris Diderot, PRODIG, Paris, France

11. Université Paris Diderot, Universités Sorbonne Paris Cité et Sorbonne (Université Pierre et Marie Curie, Université Paris 06), CNRS/IRD/MNHN, LOCEAN, Paris, France

Abstract

Abstract Despite recent advances in land surface modeling and remote sensing, estimates of the global water budget are still fairly uncertain. This study aims to evaluate the water budget of the Amazon basin based on several state-of-the-art land surface model (LSM) outputs. Water budget variables (terrestrial water storage TWS, evapotranspiration ET, surface runoff R, and base flow B) are evaluated at the basin scale using both remote sensing and in situ data. Meteorological forcings at a 3-hourly time step and 1° spatial resolution were used to run 14 LSMs. Precipitation datasets that have been rescaled to match monthly Global Precipitation Climatology Project (GPCP) and Global Precipitation Climatology Centre (GPCC) datasets and the daily Hydrologie du Bassin de l’Amazone (HYBAM) dataset were used to perform three experiments. The Hydrological Modeling and Analysis Platform (HyMAP) river routing scheme was forced with R and B and simulated discharges are compared against observations at 165 gauges. Simulated ET and TWS are compared against FLUXNET and MOD16A2 evapotranspiration datasets and Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) TWS estimates in two subcatchments of main tributaries (Madeira and Negro Rivers). At the basin scale, simulated ET ranges from 2.39 to 3.26 mm day−1 and a low spatial correlation between ET and precipitation indicates that evapotranspiration does not depend on water availability over most of the basin. Results also show that other simulated water budget components vary significantly as a function of both the LSM and precipitation dataset, but simulated TWS generally agrees with GRACE estimates at the basin scale. The best water budget simulations resulted from experiments using HYBAM, mostly explained by a denser rainfall gauge network and the rescaling at a finer temporal scale.

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

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