个人信息Personal Information
教授
博士生导师
硕士生导师
任职 : 副校长、党委常委
性别:男
毕业院校:大连理工大学
学位:博士
所在单位:建设工程学院
学科:水文学及水资源. 人工智能. 计算机应用技术. 软件工程
办公地点:综合实验4号楼 411室
联系方式:0411-84708900
电子邮箱:czhang@dlut.edu.cn
Regional differences in hydrological response to canopy interception schemes in a land surface model
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论文类型:期刊论文
发表时间:2014-02-15
发表刊物:HYDROLOGICAL PROCESSES
收录刊物:SCIE、EI、Scopus
卷号:28
期号:4
页面范围:2499-2508
ISSN号:0885-6087
关键字:canopy interception; rainfall; evapotranspiration; leaf area index; sub-grid variability; regional differences
摘要:Two different canopy interception schemes are applied to the parameterization of the hydrological processes in the Community Land Model version 3. One scheme treats rainfall and canopy water storage as spatially uniform within each model grid cell, and the other scheme considers sub-grid variability of rainfall and water storage in the parameterization of canopy hydrological processes. The hydrological responses to differences between these two schemes in different regions are studied. It is found that the impact of the sub-grid variability in the tropical regions is generally greater than the extra-tropical regions. However, such impact can't be negligible for the extra-tropical regions. Soil water in the total 3.4 m soil depth increases by 3% for Central-South Europe, and vegetation temperature increases by 0.14 degrees C for Southeastern United States if the regional averages are considered. The magnitude of the impact is greater if the analysis focuses on the specific grid cells in these regions. The impact is tightly correlated with rainfall amount and vegetation density. The correlation coefficient between such impact and rainfall amount and vegetation density varies with regions and hydrological variables, with the largest value of 0.92 for interception loss in Amazonia. Our results indicate that the impact of the sub-grid variability on hydrological processes in the extra-tropical areas is also important, although rainfall amount and vegetation density in these areas are not as high as in the tropical areas. Copyright (c) 2013 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.