Multimodel Estimate of the Global Terrestrial Water Balance: Setup and First Results

Author:

Haddeland Ingjerd1,Clark Douglas B.2,Franssen Wietse3,Ludwig Fulco3,Voß Frank4,Arnell Nigel W.5,Bertrand Nathalie6,Best Martin7,Folwell Sonja2,Gerten Dieter8,Gomes Sandra9,Gosling Simon N.10,Hagemann Stefan11,Hanasaki Naota12,Harding Richard2,Heinke Jens8,Kabat Pavel3,Koirala Sujan13,Oki Taikan13,Polcher Jan6,Stacke Tobias11,Viterbo Pedro9,Weedon Graham P.7,Yeh Pat13

Affiliation:

1. Norwegian Water Resources and Energy Directorate, Oslo, Norway, and Wageningen University and Research Centre, Wageningen, Netherlands

2. Centre for Ecology and Hydrology, Wallingford, United Kingdom

3. Wageningen University and Research Centre, Wageningen, Netherlands

4. Center for Environmental Systems Research, University of Kassel, Kassel, Germany

5. Walker Institute for Climate System Research, University of Reading, Reading, United Kingdom

6. Laboratorie de Meteorologie Dynamique, Paris, France

7. Met Office Hadley Centre, Joint Centre for Hydrometeorological Research, Wallingford, United Kingdom

8. Potsdam Institute for Climate Research, Potsdam, Germany

9. Centro de Geofisica da Universidade de Lisboa, Lisbon, Portugal

10. School of Geography, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, United Kingdom

11. Max Planck Institute for Meteorology, Hamburg, Germany

12. National Institute for Environmental Studies, Tsukuba, Japan

13. University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan

Abstract

Abstract Six land surface models and five global hydrological models participate in a model intercomparison project [Water Model Intercomparison Project (WaterMIP)], which for the first time compares simulation results of these different classes of models in a consistent way. In this paper, the simulation setup is described and aspects of the multimodel global terrestrial water balance are presented. All models were run at 0.5° spatial resolution for the global land areas for a 15-yr period (1985–99) using a newly developed global meteorological dataset. Simulated global terrestrial evapotranspiration, excluding Greenland and Antarctica, ranges from 415 to 586 mm yr−1 (from 60 000 to 85 000 km3 yr−1), and simulated runoff ranges from 290 to 457 mm yr−1 (from 42 000 to 66 000 km3 yr−1). Both the mean and median runoff fractions for the land surface models are lower than those of the global hydrological models, although the range is wider. Significant simulation differences between land surface and global hydrological models are found to be caused by the snow scheme employed. The physically based energy balance approach used by land surface models generally results in lower snow water equivalent values than the conceptual degree-day approach used by global hydrological models. Some differences in simulated runoff and evapotranspiration are explained by model parameterizations, although the processes included and parameterizations used are not distinct to either land surface models or global hydrological models. The results show that differences between models are a major source of uncertainty. Climate change impact studies thus need to use not only multiple climate models but also some other measure of uncertainty (e.g., multiple impact models).

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

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