Implementation of a two-way interactive atmospheric and ecological model and its application to the central United States
Date
1999
Authors
Lu, Lixin, author
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Abstract
A coupled RAMS/CENTURY modeling system has been developed to study regional-scale two-way interactions between the atmosphere and biosphere. Both atmospheric forcings and ecological parameters (LAI, etc.) are prognostic variables in the linked system. The atmospheric and ecosystem models exchange information on a weekly time step. CENTURY receives as input: air temperature, precipitation, radiation, wind speed, and relative humidity simulated by RAMS. From CENTURY-produced outputs, variables including leaf area index, vegetation transimissivity, vegetation fractional coverage, displacement height, roughness length, rooting profile, and albedo can be computed and returned to RAMS. In this way, vegetation responses to weekly and seasonal atmospheric changes are simulated and fed back to the atmospheric/land-surface hydrology model. The coupled model was used to simulate the two-way biosphere and atmosphere feedbacks from 1 January through 31 December, for 1988, 1989 and 1993 which represent dry, average and wet years, respectively, focusing on the central United States. Validation is performed for the atmospheric portion of the model by comparing with over 3,800 meteorological-station observations over the entire domain, and for the ecological component by comparing to A VHRR remote-sensing NDVI data sets. A series of sensitivity experiments have been conducted to highlight interactions .and feedbacks between atmospheric and land surf ace processes, The coupled control run's atmospheric lateral boundary conditions have been perturbed to create both dry and wet springs. The model's ability to represent the interannual and seasonal variations in both climate and biomass has been examined. The results show that seasonal and interannual vegetation phenological variation strongly influences regional climate patterns through its control over land-surface water and energy exchange. The coupled model captures the key aspects of weekly, seasonal, and annual feedbacks between the atmosphere and ecological systems. In addition, it has demonstrated its usefulness as a research tool for studying complex interactions between the atmosphere, biosphere, and hydrosphere.
Description
Fall 1999.
Also issued as author's dissertation (Ph.D.) -- Colorado State University, 1999.
Also issued as author's dissertation (Ph.D.) -- Colorado State University, 1999.
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Subject
Plant-atmosphere relationships -- United States
Vegetation and climate -- United States
Bioclimatology -- United State
Atmospheric models