4
views
0
recommends
+1 Recommend
0 collections
    0
    shares
      • Record: found
      • Abstract: found
      • Article: not found

      Evaluation and enhancement of permafrost modeling with the NASA Catchment Land Surface Model

      research-article

      Read this article at

      ScienceOpenPublisherPMC
      Bookmark
          There is no author summary for this article yet. Authors can add summaries to their articles on ScienceOpen to make them more accessible to a non-specialist audience.

          Abstract

          Besides soil hydrology and snow processes, the NASA Catchment Land Surface Model (CLSM) simulates soil temperature in six layers from the surface down to 13m depth. In this study, to examine CLSM’s treatment of subsurface thermodynamics, a baseline simulation produced subsurface temperatures for 1980–2014 across Alaska at 9-km resolution. The results were evaluated using in situ observations from permafrost sites across Alaska. The baseline simulation was found to capture the broad features of inter- and intra-annual variations in soil temperature. Additional model experiments revealed that: (i) the representativeness of local meteorological forcing limits the model’s ability to accurately reproduce soil temperature, and (ii) vegetation heterogeneity has a profound influence on subsurface thermodynamics via impacts on the snow physics and energy exchange at surface. Specifically, the profile-average RMSE for soil temperature was reduced from 2.96°C to 2.10°C at one site and from 2.38°C to 2.25°C at another by using local forcing and land cover, respectively. Moreover, accounting for the influence of soil organic carbon on the soil thermal properties in CLSM leads to further improvements in profile-average soil temperature RMSE, with reductions of 16% to 56% across the different study sites. The mean bias of climatological ALT is reduced by 36% to 89%, and the RMSE is reduced by 11% to 47%. Finally, results reveal that at some sites it may be essential to include a purely organic soil layer to obtain, in conjunction with vegetation and snow effects, a realistic “buffer zone” between the atmospheric forcing and soil thermal processes.

          Related collections

          Author and article information

          Journal
          101691496
          45687
          J Adv Model Earth Syst
          J Adv Model Earth Syst
          Journal of advances in modeling earth systems
          1942-2466
          19 May 2020
          8 November 2017
          November 2017
          30 June 2020
          : 9
          : 7
          : 2771-2795
          Affiliations
          [1 ]Earth System Science Interdisciplinary Center, University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland
          [2 ]Global Modeling and Assimilation Office, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Maryland
          [3 ]Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland
          Author notes
          Correspondence to: Dr. Jing Tao ( JingTao@ 123456umd.edu )
          Article
          PMC7325731 PMC7325731 7325731 nasapa1516234
          10.1002/2017ms001019
          7325731
          32607137
          7b3bcbed-3acd-499b-b004-81864f057a37
          History
          Categories
          Article

          Comments

          Comment on this article