Development of a coupled simulation framework representing the lake and river continuum of mass and energy (TCHOIR v1.0)
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Published:2021-09-14
Issue:9
Volume:14
Page:5669-5693
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ISSN:1991-9603
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Container-title:Geoscientific Model Development
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Geosci. Model Dev.
Author:
Tokuda Daisuke, Kim HyungjunORCID, Yamazaki Dai, Oki TaikanORCID
Abstract
Abstract. Terrestrial surface water temperature is a key variable affecting water
quality and energy balance, and thermodynamics and fluid dynamics are tightly
coupled in fluvial and lacustrine systems. Streamflow generally plays a role
in the horizontal redistribution of heat, and thermal exchange in lakes
predominantly occurs in a vertical direction. However, numerical models
simulate the water temperature for uncoupled rivers and lakes, and the
linkages between them on a global scale remain unclear. In this study, we
proposed an integrated modeling framework: Tightly Coupled framework for
Hydrology of Open water Interactions in River–lake network (TCHOIR, read as
“tee quire”). The objective is to simulate terrestrial fluvial and
thermodynamics as a continuum of mass and energy in solid and liquid phases
redistributed among rivers and lakes. TCHOIR uses high-resolution geographical
information harmonized over fluvial and lacustrine networks. The results have
been validated through comparison with in situ observations and
satellite-based data products, and the model sensitivity has been tested with
multiple meteorological forcing datasets. It was observed that the
“coupled” mode outperformed the “river-only” mode in terms of discharge
and temperature downstream of lakes; moreover, it was observed that seasonal and
interannual variation in lake water levels and temperature are also more
reliable in the “coupled” mode. The inclusion of lakes in the coupled model
resulted in an increase in river temperatures during winter at midlatitudes
and a decrease in temperatures during summer at high latitudes, which reflects
the role of lakes as a form of large heat storage. The river–lake coupling
framework presented herein provides a basis for further elucidating the role
of terrestrial surface water in Earth's energy cycle.
Funder
National Research Foundation of Korea Japan Society for the Promotion of Science Environmental Restoration and Conservation Agency
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
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