lecture 2: biophysical interactions between land and atmosphere elena shevliakova & chip levy

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Lecture 2: Biophysical interactions between land and atmosphere Elena Shevliakova & Chip Levy

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Page 1: Lecture 2: Biophysical interactions between land and atmosphere Elena Shevliakova & Chip Levy

Lecture 2: Biophysical interactions between land and atmosphere

Elena Shevliakova & Chip Levy

Page 2: Lecture 2: Biophysical interactions between land and atmosphere Elena Shevliakova & Chip Levy

Faq 1.1

from IPCC (2007)

Energy Flows in the Atmosphere

Page 3: Lecture 2: Biophysical interactions between land and atmosphere Elena Shevliakova & Chip Levy

Generalized scope of interactions

GB Bonan 2002, Ecological Climatology

time-scale

Page 4: Lecture 2: Biophysical interactions between land and atmosphere Elena Shevliakova & Chip Levy

Constraints of Climate on Plants

• Sunlight – Available sunlight drives photosynthesis. – ~1.4 g dry matter is produced for 1MJ of intercepted sunlight (2.5% efficiency). – Heats surface and evaporates Water • Water – Hydrates cells – Causes tugor for growth and cell expansion – Transfers nutrients – Water vapor is lost as stomates open to acquire CO2

• Temperature – Regulates rates of biochemical and enzymatic reactions – Determines if water is gas, liquid or solid

Page 5: Lecture 2: Biophysical interactions between land and atmosphere Elena Shevliakova & Chip Levy

Land cover effect on climate

• Radiation– Surface albedo– Surface temperature and emissivity

• Turbulent fluxes– Roughness– Stomatal conductance, Leaf area index (LAI)– Available moisture in soil and interception storage

Page 6: Lecture 2: Biophysical interactions between land and atmosphere Elena Shevliakova & Chip Levy

Land Surface-Atmosphere Coupling

*for natural fires and re-growth in boreal region.

Page 7: Lecture 2: Biophysical interactions between land and atmosphere Elena Shevliakova & Chip Levy

Surface Energy Balance

• The land surface on average is heated by net radiation balanced by exchanges with the atmosphere of sensible and latent heat

• Rad_net = ShortWave_net + LongWave_net

• Sensible heat [SH] is the energy carried by the atmosphere in its temperature

• Latent heat [LH]is the energy lost from the surface by evaporation of surface water

• The latent heat of the water vapor is converted to sensible heat in the atmosphere through vapor condensation

• The condensed water is returned to the surface through precipitation.

Page 8: Lecture 2: Biophysical interactions between land and atmosphere Elena Shevliakova & Chip Levy

Major Radiation Components

• Absorbed• Reflected• Transmitted

Page 9: Lecture 2: Biophysical interactions between land and atmosphere Elena Shevliakova & Chip Levy

Radiative Properties of the Atmosphere, Leaves and Surface

Conservation of energy: radiation at a given wavelength is either:– reflected — property of surface or medium is called reflectance or

albedo (0-1)– absorbed — property is absorptance or emissivity (0-1)– transmitted — property is transmittance (0-1)

reflectance + absorptance + transmittance = 1for a surface, transmittance = 0

Page 10: Lecture 2: Biophysical interactions between land and atmosphere Elena Shevliakova & Chip Levy

General Surface Reflectance Curves

from Klein, Hall and Riggs, 1998: Hydrological Processes, 12, 1723 - 1744 with sources from Clark et al. (1993); Salisbury and D'Aria (1992, 1994); Salisbury et al. (1994)

Page 11: Lecture 2: Biophysical interactions between land and atmosphere Elena Shevliakova & Chip Levy

MODIS Broadband Albedo, 10/1986

Page 12: Lecture 2: Biophysical interactions between land and atmosphere Elena Shevliakova & Chip Levy

Snow Albedo Feedback

• NH snow cover retreats rapidly as radiation and T increase

• Surface albedo is decreased and absorbed radiation is increased => enhanced warming

Hall and Qu, 2005

Page 13: Lecture 2: Biophysical interactions between land and atmosphere Elena Shevliakova & Chip Levy

Pitman 2003

Page 14: Lecture 2: Biophysical interactions between land and atmosphere Elena Shevliakova & Chip Levy

GLDAS

Page 15: Lecture 2: Biophysical interactions between land and atmosphere Elena Shevliakova & Chip Levy

LAI Biophysical Interactions

Page 16: Lecture 2: Biophysical interactions between land and atmosphere Elena Shevliakova & Chip Levy

Surface Roughness Length

Page 17: Lecture 2: Biophysical interactions between land and atmosphere Elena Shevliakova & Chip Levy

Roughness Length Interaction with Biophysics

Page 18: Lecture 2: Biophysical interactions between land and atmosphere Elena Shevliakova & Chip Levy

Image adapted from an illustration which originally appeared in Scientific American (September 1989, p. 82). http://www.globalchange.umich.edu/globalchange1/current/labs/water_cycle/water_cycle.html

thousands of km3 per year

Page 19: Lecture 2: Biophysical interactions between land and atmosphere Elena Shevliakova & Chip Levy

Hydrological cycle and Climate

Climate dynamics and physics depend on exchange of moisture between atmosphere, land and ocean

– Water vapor acts as a greenhouse gas and nearly doubles effects of greenhouse warming CO2, methane, and all other gases

– ~50% of net surface cooling* results from evaporation– ~30% of thermal energy driving atmospheric circulations provided by

latent heating in clouds– Clouds alter radiation budget

* This is a little tricky

Page 20: Lecture 2: Biophysical interactions between land and atmosphere Elena Shevliakova & Chip Levy

Desertification Positive Feedback (soil moisture)

Page 21: Lecture 2: Biophysical interactions between land and atmosphere Elena Shevliakova & Chip Levy
Page 22: Lecture 2: Biophysical interactions between land and atmosphere Elena Shevliakova & Chip Levy

Foley et al. 2005

Natural/Potential Vegetation vs Land Use (Human Impact)

Page 23: Lecture 2: Biophysical interactions between land and atmosphere Elena Shevliakova & Chip Levy

Land Cover Change and Climate

• Land use impacts the amount and partitioning of available energy at the earth’s surface.

• Model response is dependent on weighting of various parameter changes.• In our model (LM2), a change from forest to grassland leads to:

Page 24: Lecture 2: Biophysical interactions between land and atmosphere Elena Shevliakova & Chip Levy

Forests and Future Climate Change

• Biophysical forest-atmosphere interactions can dampen or amplify anthropogenic climate change– Tropical forests could mitigate warming through evaporative cooling– Boreal forests could increase warming through the low albedo – The evaporative and albedo effects of temperate forests are unclear

• Potential increase in forest growth and expansion will attenuate global warming through carbon sequestration

Page 25: Lecture 2: Biophysical interactions between land and atmosphere Elena Shevliakova & Chip Levy

MODIS Broadband Albedo, 10/1986

Page 26: Lecture 2: Biophysical interactions between land and atmosphere Elena Shevliakova & Chip Levy

Bonan 2008.

Page 27: Lecture 2: Biophysical interactions between land and atmosphere Elena Shevliakova & Chip Levy

Land-atmosphere interactions: Amazonia (Betts & Silva Dias, 2009)

• Large seasonal variations in precipitation, cloud cover and radiation, not temperature

• Large changes in land use affecting, surface albedo and roughness, atmospheric composition from biomass burning,

• Large scale biosphere-atmosphere experiment (LBA) since the mid 1990s– long-term monitoring;– Intensive field campaigns;– data sets;

Page 28: Lecture 2: Biophysical interactions between land and atmosphere Elena Shevliakova & Chip Levy

Land Surface-Atmosphere Coupling

*for natural fires and re-growth in boreal region.

Page 29: Lecture 2: Biophysical interactions between land and atmosphere Elena Shevliakova & Chip Levy

Betts, A.K., and M.A.F. Silva Dias, 2009: Progress in understanding land-surface-atmosphere coupling over the Amazon: a review. Submitted to J. Adv. Model. Earth Syst.

Land-atmosphere interactions: tropics

Page 30: Lecture 2: Biophysical interactions between land and atmosphere Elena Shevliakova & Chip Levy

Land-atmosphere interactions: tropics

Betts and Silvia Dias (2009) added new pathways to the Betts (1996) diagram:– Surface influence on the seasonal behavior of clouds, aerosols and

precipitation;– Impact of diffuse radiation on net ecosystem exchange;– role of convection in the transport of atmospheric tracers, including

CO2;– Coupling between clouds, meso-scale dynamics, and atmospheric

circulation (oceans play a role).

Page 31: Lecture 2: Biophysical interactions between land and atmosphere Elena Shevliakova & Chip Levy

Potential natural land cover distribution

Tropical deforestation experiment Historical land cover change experiment

Land cover disturbances

Experiments discussed in Findell et al. (2006, 2007, 2009)

Page 32: Lecture 2: Biophysical interactions between land and atmosphere Elena Shevliakova & Chip Levy

Strong local response,Weak remote response

Change in annual net radiation (W/m2), 1990-NatVeg

• Local responses to both perturbations are generally significant– Less Rnet, less evaporation, higher temperatures– Rainfall response not homogeneous

• Remote responses do not pass field significance tests• Some globally and annually averaged fields do pass significance tests

because of the strong local responses

Page 33: Lecture 2: Biophysical interactions between land and atmosphere Elena Shevliakova & Chip Levy

The next two slides are a problem for the class. Please check the paper referenced in the next slide and explain to me why a surface albedo increase for pasture correlates with an increase in observed cloudiness.

Page 34: Lecture 2: Biophysical interactions between land and atmosphere Elena Shevliakova & Chip Levy

Source: AK Betts

Page 35: Lecture 2: Biophysical interactions between land and atmosphere Elena Shevliakova & Chip Levy

Pitman 2003

Page 36: Lecture 2: Biophysical interactions between land and atmosphere Elena Shevliakova & Chip Levy

Summary

• Land and atmosphere are linked through exchanges of energy, moisture and chemical tracers (chemical link to be discussed).

• Snow/Ice-albedo feedback is a powerful regional climate feedback in most, if not all, climate models (Suki Manabe and many others)

• Surface albedo is a powerful climate knob (any climate model builder will tell you).

• Tropics have potential to mitigate climate change through evaporative cooling but the magnitude will depend on the future land use activities.

• The biophysical couplings are numerous, intertwined and not easy to unravel (this makes simplifications tricky in the scientific sense).