Abstract - CLASP
Gutowski, W. J., C. J. Vorosmarty, M. Person, Z. Otles, B.
Fekete and J. York, 2002: A Coupled Land-Atmosphere Simulation Program
(CLASP). J. Geophys. Res. (in press).
We present a model and application designed to study the coupled land-atmosphere
hydrologic cycle, following water from its inflow into a region by horizontal
atmospheric transport through surface-atmosphere exchange processes
and aquifer recharge to outflow as runoff and river discharge. The model
includes a two-way water flow among its major reservoirs (atmosphere,
vadose zone, groundwater, surface water, river). A unique feature of
the model is that phreatophytic interactions are included when the water
table intersects the root zone. The model emulates a uniform grid box
of an atmospheric general circulation model, but with finer horizontal
resolution for the land processes, and forms a test bed for developing
continental-scale simulation of the hydrologic cycle.
The model is calibrated using the First International Satellite Land
Surface Climatology Project (ISLSCP) Field Experiment (FIFE) observations
for 1987 and validated using FIFE observations for 1988 and 1989. Four
physical factors emerge as important for simulating the FIFE water cycle:
effective relative humidity for initiating stable (large scale) condensation,
length of the growing season, amount of available soil water, and cloud
cover parameterization.
Further evaluation uses water table and river discharge measurements
for years up to 1993. The model simulates multiyear behavior in the
hydrologic cycle reasonably well. Average differences between FIFE observations
and simulated fluxes during the calibration period are only a few percent,
including fluxes not specifically calibrated. Model-observation differences
in surface sensible and latent fluxes are larger during the 1988 drought
but recover to relatively small values for 1989, suggesting some difficulty
in simulating hydrologic extremes occurring outside the calibration
conditions.
A model sensitivity study using statistical disaggregation to allow
precipitation to fall on only a portion of the landscape indicates that
spatial disaggregation of precipitation can have strong impact on groundwater
storage and surface discharge, potentially improving agreement between
observed and simulated streamflow. Water redistributed through the model's
quifer-river network can at times raise the water table high enough
for water to seep back to the vegetation root zone and increase evapotranspiration.
During relatively dry periods, up to 50% of monthly evapotranspiration
was derived from groundwater-supported evapotranspiration, emphasizing
the need to quantify better aquifer-atmosphere interaction. The work
also demonstrates the feasibility and utility of fully coupled water
budgeting schemes.