Biophysical Impact of Land-Use and Land-Cover Change on Subgrid Temperature in CMIP6 Models

Author:

Tang Tao1ORCID,Lee Xuhui1,Zhang Keer1,Cai Lei23ORCID,Lawrence David M.4ORCID,Shevliakova Elena5

Affiliation:

1. a School of the Environment, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut

2. b Norwegian Research Centre, Bergen, Norway

3. c Department of Atmospheric Sciences, Yunnan University, Kunming, China

4. d National Center for Atmospheric Research, Boulder, Colorado

5. e NOAA/Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory, Princeton, New Jersey

Abstract

Abstract In this study, we investigate the air temperature response to land-use and land-cover change (LULCC; cropland expansion and deforestation) using subgrid land model output generated by a set of CMIP6 model simulations. Our study is motivated by the fact that ongoing land-use activities are occurring at local scales, typically significantly smaller than the resolvable scale of a grid cell in Earth system models. It aims to explore the potential for a multimodel approach to better characterize LULCC local climatic effects. On an annual scale, the CMIP6 models are in general agreement that croplands are warmer than primary and secondary land (psl; mainly forests, grasslands, and bare ground) in the tropics and cooler in the mid–high latitudes, except for one model. The transition from warming to cooling occurs at approximately 40°N. Although the surface heating potential, which combines albedo and latent heat flux effects, can explain reasonably well the zonal mean latitudinal subgrid temperature variations between crop and psl tiles in the historical simulations, it does not provide a good prediction on subgrid temperature for other land tile configurations (crop vs forest; grass vs forest) under Shared Socioeconomic Pathway 5–8.5 (SSP5–8.5) forcing scenarios. A subset of simulations with the CESM2 model reveals that latitudinal subgrid temperature variation is positively related to variation in net surface shortwave radiation and negatively related to variation in the surface energy redistribution factor, with a dominant role from the latter south of 30°N. We suggest that this emergent relationship can be used to benchmark the performance of land surface parameterizations and for prediction of local temperature response to LULCC.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

Reference65 articles.

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