Modelling the effects of shrub-tundra on snow and runoff
Item Status
Embargo End Date
Date
Authors
Abstract
Observational and modelling studies show that the warming of the Arctic is leading
to shrub expansion. This shift in vegetation cover is expected to significantly
alter the distribution of snow across the landscape and the interactions between
the land surface and the atmosphere. Shrubs capture wind-blown snow, increasing
snow depth and decreasing winter water loss through sublimation, and bend
beneath the weight of snow, affecting albedo. Snow is highly insulative and affects
the soil hydrological and thermal properties. Therefore, as the snow-vegetation-soil
interactions is expected to be at the core of feedback loops leading to further
shrub expansion, there is a need for models to be able to simulate these processes
accurately. Initially using the community land surface model JULES (Joint UK
Land Environment Simulator) this study investigates the effects of shrub-tundra
on snow and runoff. Alternative formulations of soil processes are proposed,
which are better adapted to the representation of subgrid heterogeneity in cold
regions than the current model formulation, and evaluated over the Abisko and
Torne-Kalix river basins. In addition, a high resolution shrub bending model,
which calculates the exposed winter shrub fraction, is developed and parameterised
for use alongside the snow cover parameterisation in JULES in order to
provide a better representation of shrub-specific processes. This revised JULES
more than doubles the efficiency coefficient and halfs the negative bias between
modelled and observed runoff in the shrub-tundra Abisko basin. However, the
current structure of the model is found to be inadequate for use in investigating
the effect of shrub-tundra expansion because it calculates a single energy balance
for the snow-free and the snow-covered areas. To address this issue, a distributed
three-source (snow-shrub-ground) model (D3SM) is developed. D3SM is evaluated
against snow and energy
ux measurements from a shrub-tundra basin in
the Yukon, Canada, and is found to reproduce snowmelt energetics well. The
effects of shrub expansion on the energy balance of the basin during snowmelt
are then investigated by increasing the vegetation fraction and canopy height of
the current shrub distribution, which is found to be positively correlated with
topography. D3SM shows that the most significant effects of shrub expansion in
the basin are to reduce the spatial variability of snow depth and to increase the
sensible heat flux from the surface to the atmosphere.
This item appears in the following Collection(s)

