Distinguishing between early- and late-covering crops in the land surface model Noah-MP: impact on simulated surface energy fluxes and temperature
-
Published:2020-05-26
Issue:10
Volume:17
Page:2791-2805
-
ISSN:1726-4189
-
Container-title:Biogeosciences
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:Biogeosciences
Author:
Bohm Kristina, Ingwersen Joachim, Milovac Josipa, Streck ThiloORCID
Abstract
Abstract. Land surface models are essential parts of climate and weather models. The
widely used Noah-MP land surface model requires information on the leaf area
index (LAI) and green vegetation fraction (GVF) as key inputs of its
evapotranspiration scheme. The model aggregates all agricultural areas into
a land use class termed “cropland and pasture”. In a previous study we
showed that, on a regional scale, the GVF has a bimodal distribution formed by
two crop groups differing in phenology and growth dynamics: early-covering
crops (ECC; e.g., winter wheat, winter rapeseed, winter barley) and late-covering crops (LCC; e.g., corn, silage maize, sugar beet). That result can
be generalized for central Europe. The present study quantifies the effect
of splitting the land use class cropland and pasture of Noah-MP into ECC and LCC on surface energy fluxes and temperature. We further studied the
influence of increasing the LCC share, which in the study area (the
Kraichgau region, southwest Germany) is mainly the result of heavily
subsidized biomass production, on energy partitioning at the land surface.
We used the GVF dynamics derived from high-resolution (5 m × 5 m) RapidEye
satellite data and measured LAI data for the simulations. Our results
confirm that the GVF and LAI strongly influence the partitioning of surface
energy fluxes, resulting in pronounced differences between simulations of ECC and LCC. Splitting up the generic crop into ECC and LCC had the
strongest effect on land surface exchange processes in July–August. During
this period, ECC are at the senescence growth stage or already harvested,
while LCC have a well-developed ground-covering canopy. The generic crop
resulted in humid bias, i.e., an increase in evapotranspiration by +0.5 mm d−1 (latent heat flux is 1.3 MJ m−2 d−1), decrease in sensible heat flux (H)
by 1.2 MJ m−2 d−1 and decrease in surface temperature by
−1 ∘C. The bias increased as the shares of ECC and LCC became
similar. The observed differences will impact the simulations of processes
in the planetary boundary layer. Increasing the LCC share from 28 % to 38 %
in the Kraichgau region led to a decrease in latent heat flux (LE) and a
heating up of the land surface in the early growing season. Over the second
part of the season, LE increased and the land surface cooled down by up to
1 ∘C.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Reference36 articles.
1. Bohm, K., Ingwersen, J., Milovac, J., and Streck, T.: Noah-MP simulated surface energy fluxes and temperature for a generic crop, early covering crops (ECC) and late covering crops (LCC) for Kraichgau region, southwest Germany, PANGAEA, https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.916167, 2020. 2. Chen, F. and Xie, Z.: Effects of crop growth and development on land surface
fluxes, Adv. Atmos. Sci., 28, 927–944, 2011. 3. Chen, F. and Xie, Z.: Effects of crop growth and development on regional
climate: A case study over East Asian monsoon area, Clim. Dynam., 38,
2291–2305, 2012. 4. Crawford, T. M., Stensrud, D. J., Mora, F., Merchant, J. W., and Wetzel, P.
J.: Value of incorporating satellite-derived land cover data in MM5/PLACE
for simulating surface temperatures, J. Hydrometeorol., 2, 453–468, 2001. 5. El Maayar, M., Chen, J. M., and Price, D. T.: On the use of field
measurements of energy fluxes to evaluate land surface models, Ecol. Model.,
214, 293–304, 2008.
Cited by
7 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|