scholarly journals Permafrost Area Is Sensitive to Key Soil and Snow Physics

Eos ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 97 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Shultz
Keyword(s):  

Accounting for key soil and snow variables shows a much higher impact on simulated permafrost area than uncertainties in land cover and climate data.

2014 ◽  
Vol 18 (9) ◽  
pp. 3511-3538 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Müller Schmied ◽  
S. Eisner ◽  
D. Franz ◽  
M. Wattenbach ◽  
F. T. Portmann ◽  
...  

Abstract. Global-scale assessments of freshwater fluxes and storages by hydrological models under historic climate conditions are subject to a variety of uncertainties. Using the global hydrological model WaterGAP (Water – Global Assessment and Prognosis) 2.2, we investigated the sensitivity of simulated freshwater fluxes and water storage variations to five major sources of uncertainty: climate forcing, land cover input, model structure/refinements, consideration of human water use and calibration (or no calibration) against observed mean river discharge. In a modeling experiment, five variants of the standard version of WaterGAP 2.2 were generated that differed from the standard version only regarding the investigated source of uncertainty. The basin-specific calibration approach for WaterGAP was found to have the largest effect on grid cell fluxes as well as on global AET (actual evapotranspiration) and discharge into oceans for the period 1971–2000. Regarding grid cell fluxes, climate forcing ranks second before land cover input. Global water storage trends are most sensitive to model refinements (mainly modeling of groundwater depletion) and consideration of human water use. The best fit to observed time series of monthly river discharge or discharge seasonality is obtained with the standard WaterGAP 2.2 model version which is calibrated and driven by daily reanalysis-based WFD/WFDEI (combination of Watch Forcing Data based on ERA40 and Watch Forcing Data based on ERA-Interim) climate data. Discharge computed by a calibrated model version using monthly CRU TS (Climate Research Unit time-series) 3.2 and GPCC (Global Precipitation Climatology Center) v6 climate input reduced the fit to observed discharge for most stations. Taking into account uncertainties of climate and land cover data, global 1971–2000 discharge into oceans and inland sinks ranges between 40 000 and 42 000 km3 yr−1. Global actual evapotranspiration, with 70 000 km3 yr−1, is rather unaffected by climate and land cover uncertainties. Human water use reduced river discharge by 1000 km3 yr−1, such that global renewable water resources are estimated to range between 41 000 and 43 000 km3 yr−1. The climate data sets WFD (available until 2001) and WFDEI (starting in 1979) were found to be inconsistent with respect to shortwave radiation data, resulting in strongly different actual evapotranspiration. Global assessments of freshwater fluxes and storages would therefore benefit from the development of a global data set of consistent daily climate forcing from 1900 to present.


Insects ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (11) ◽  
pp. 972
Author(s):  
Julie Pinto ◽  
Paola Magni ◽  
R. O’Brien ◽  
Ian Dadour

Changes in common and widespread insect populations such as the domestic filth fly in urban cities are useful and relevant bioindicators for overall changes in the insect biomass. The current study surveyed necrophagous flies by placing a weekly trap from June–September over a two-year period in the city of New Haven, Connecticut, to compare data on fly abundance and diversity with data collected 78 years earlier. Climate and land cover changes were also assessed in combination with the fly population for each period. The survey results suggest the domestic filth fly population is now less diverse with decreased species richness and changes in the relative abundance of species. In both surveys, 95–96% of the population was composed of only three species. The current survey data indicate the numerical dominance of Lucilia sericata has decreased, the abundance of several species, notably Lucilia coeruleiviridis, has increased, and Lucilia illustris is absent. Species that showed a significant interaction with temperature in the 1940s survey have now increased in abundance, with several of the trapped species continuing to show an interaction with temperature and rainfall. Analysis of the land cover and climate data characterizes the trap site as a region exposed to a prolonged period of industrialization and urbanization, with only 7% of the land cover remaining undeveloped and over 50% impervious, coupled with an increase in temperature and rainfall. This study serves as a model for changes in domestic filth fly populations and other insects in similarly highly urbanized established cities.


2018 ◽  
Vol 3 (10) ◽  
pp. 78-88
Author(s):  
Siti Aekbal Salleh ◽  
Zulkiflee Abd.Latif ◽  
Wan Mohd. Naim Wan Mohd ◽  
Andy Chan

This study investigates the influence of surface heterogeneity to the land surface temperature (LST). The land cover changes evaluation and historical climate data comparison were used in this study. Land cover, Normalised Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI), Normalised Difference Built-up Index (NDBI) and LST maps are produced to quantify the impacts of urbanization towards the surface thermal behaviour. The urbanization was set on years 1999 to 2006. While urbanization continued in 2009, the surface temperature was lower than that of 2006. The sea level was notably high during 2006, suggesting the lost of ice extent and evident to the climate change effects. Therefore, the fluctuation of temperature in 1999 to 2009 manifestly influenced by green space and climatic response and not solely caused by urbanization. Keywords: Land surface temperature, Land cover, Urban, Climate. eISSN 2514-751X © 2018. The Authors. Published for AMER ABRA cE-Bs by e-International Publishing House, Ltd., UK. This is an open-access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/). Peer–review under responsibility of AMER (Association of Malaysian Environment-Behaviour Researchers), ABRA (Association of Behavioural Researchers on Asians) and cE-Bs (Centre for Environment-Behaviour Studies), Faculty of Architecture, Planning & Surveying, Universiti Teknologi MARA, Malaysia. DOI: https://doi.org/10.21834/aje-bs.v3i10.315     


Finisterra ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 38 (76) ◽  
Author(s):  
António Perdigão

GIS IN WATER MANAGEMENT FOR AGRICULTURAL PURPOSES. The needs originating from the application of European Union’s CAP and Water Directive demand a very precise knowledge of the potential uses of water, especially in what concerns to its volumes, availability and quality. In Southern Europe this is particularly significant in order to conduct an eco-compatible management of water resources. Decision Support Systems (DSS) for agricultural purposes and management of agriculture vs. environment conflicts, assuming the need for a compatible water management, account for the objectives and tools adapted to the problems under analysis. The specificities of agricultural practices have been slowly requiring the use of information technology tools, monitoring and follow-up systems, GIS, simulation models and remote sensing approaches, using platforms with different spatial and temporal resolutions. Irrigation management involve availability of good quality data assuming that most information is dynamic, therefore requiring permanent updating (e.g. land use/land cover and climate data). However, the technical characteristics of the tools, very seldom are not adapted to the landscape units context or to the administrative/regional units, to which they are to be applied. The land units approach enables the thematic analysis of landscapes, assuming a strategy based on textures classified as spatial units, in terms of land use/land cover characteristics.


2011 ◽  
Vol 8 (8) ◽  
pp. 2027-2036 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. Poulter ◽  
D. C. Frank ◽  
E. L. Hodson ◽  
N. E. Zimmermann

Abstract. Terrestrial and oceanic carbon cycle processes remove ~55 % of global carbon emissions, with the remaining 45 %, known as the "airborne fraction", accumulating in the atmosphere. The long-term dynamics of the component fluxes contributing to the airborne fraction are challenging to interpret, but important for informing fossil-fuel emission targets and for monitoring the trends of biospheric carbon fluxes. Climate and land-cover forcing data for terrestrial ecosystem models are a largely unexplored source of uncertainty in terms of their contribution to understanding airborne fraction dynamics. Here we present results using a single dynamic global vegetation model forced by an ensemble experiment of climate (CRU, ERA-Interim, NCEP-DOE II), and diagnostic land-cover datasets (GLC2000, GlobCover, MODIS). For the averaging period 1996–2005, forcing uncertainties resulted in a large range of simulated global carbon fluxes, up to 13 % for net primary production (52.4 to 60.2 Pg C a−1) and 19 % for soil respiration (44.2 to 54.8 Pg C a−1). The sensitivity of contemporary global terrestrial carbon fluxes to climate strongly depends on forcing data (1.2–5.9 Pg C K−1 or 0.5 to 2.7 ppmv CO2 K−1), but weakening carbon sinks in sub-tropical regions and strengthening carbon sinks in northern latitudes are found to be robust. The climate and land-cover combination that best correlate to the inferred carbon sink, and with the lowest residuals, is from observational data (CRU) rather than reanalysis climate data and with land-cover categories that have more stringent criteria for forest cover (MODIS). Since 1998, an increasing positive trend in residual error from bottom-up accounting of global sinks and sources (from 0.03 (1989–2005) to 0.23 Pg C a−1 (1998–2005)) suggests that either modeled drought sensitivity of carbon fluxes is too high, or that carbon emissions from net land-cover change is too large.


2004 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jauad El Kharraz ◽  
Jose A. Sobrino ◽  
L. Morales ◽  
Juan Carlos Jimenez-Munoz ◽  
Guillem P. Soria ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Poerbandono ◽  
Philip J. Ward ◽  
Miga Magenika Julian

This paper discusses a study of application of global spatio-temporal climate data sets and a hydrological model operated in Spatial Tools for River Basin Environmental Analysis and Management (STREAM). The study investigates reconstruction of monthly hydrographs across several selected points of the western part of Java, Indonesia for the period 1983-2002. Prior to the reconstruction, set up and calibration are carried out. The set up includes preparation of monthly precipitation and temperature data set, digital elevation model of the domain being studied and their compilation with land cover map. Discharge observations from six stations located mostly at the upper parts of major watersheds in the domain are used to calibrate the model. It is found that the model performs results with acceptable agreement. Comparison between computed and observed monthly average discharges correlate quite well with coefficient ranging from 0.72 to 0.93. The accuracy of computed total annual average discharge in five out of six observation stations is within the range of 7%. Optimum setting of calibration parameters is discovered. This study offers scheme for reconstructing historical discharge in paleo-climate perspective and future scenario for predicting local effect of global climate change, given the predicted climate data sets and geographic setting (i.e. topography and land cover).


2012 ◽  
Vol 49 (8) ◽  
pp. 925-937 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yu Zhang ◽  
Junhua Li ◽  
Xiping Wang ◽  
Wenjun Chen ◽  
Wendy Sladen ◽  
...  

Most spatial modelling of permafrost distribution and dynamics has been conducted at half-degree latitude/longitude or coarser resolution. Such coarse results are difficult to use for land managers and ecologists. Here we mapped permafrost distribution at 30 m × 30 m resolution for a region in the northwest Hudson Bay Lowlands using a process-based model. Land-cover types and leaf area indices were derived from Landsat imagery; peat thickness was estimated from elevation based on field measurements; and climate data were interpolated from station observations. The modelled active-layer thickness and permafrost extent compared well with field observations, demonstrating that modelling and mapping permafrost at a high spatial resolution is practical for terrains such as these lowlands. The map portrayed large variations in active-layer thickness, with land-cover type and peat thickness being the most important controlling variables. The modelled active-layer thickness on average increased by 37% during the twentieth century due to increases in air temperature and precipitation, and permafrost disappeared in some southern areas. The spatial scale of the permafrost maps developed in this study is close to that of the ecosystem and landscape features; therefore, the results are useful for land management and ecosystem assessment.


2011 ◽  
Vol 27 (3) ◽  
pp. 289-301
Author(s):  
Ga-Lam Lee ◽  
Kyung-Soo Han ◽  
Do-Yong Kim
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Ntiranyibagira Elysée ◽  
Sambou Bienvenu ◽  
Abou Thiam ◽  
Naramabuye François Xavier ◽  
Uwiringiyimana Thacienne ◽  
...  

The study of water resources’ dynamics and vulnerability in Rusizi national Park aimed to achieve the following objectives: (1) to identify, characterize and map water bodies, (2) to analyze and explain their periodical evolutions and (3) to analyze the spatial transformation processes affecting them. It is a contribution to the knowledge of the Park’s water resources for the development of monitoring systems and the sustainability of their functions as strategic ecosystems. It is based on the diachronic analysis of land cover from multi-date Landsat images of years 1984, 1990 and 2011 (TM), 2000 (ETM+) and 2015 (OLI-TIRS), landscape ecology tools and socio-economic and climate data. Supervised classification of images allowed the identification of 9 to 10 land cover classes including water bodies, according to years. A total number of 17 water bodies were detected from 1984 to 2015. During this period, regularly detected and dried up water bodies represent 18.2% and 54.6% respectively. The rates of water bodies’ drying up were 69.2% in 2000 and 64.2% in 2015. Water bodies are experiencing a great deterioration in number, size and stability. The Park's water coverage has decreased from 3.56% in 1984 to 2.43% in 2015. This corresponds to a decline of 31.2%. The water bodies’ stability, which was 75.70% between 1984 and 1990, represents only 42.78% between 1984 and 2015. The stability of individual water bodies is decreasing as well while low spatial connectivities are being observed between some close water bodies. The spatial transformation processes carrying these dynamics are patch enlargement, patch creation, patch attrition and patch dissection, depending on the period. Global warming, rainfall variability and farming activities like land drainage and irrigation are the most important threats to water resources.


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