Impact of the radiation balance on snowmelt in a sparse deciduous birch forest
dc.contributor.advisor
Essery, Richard
en
dc.contributor.advisor
Williams, Mathew
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dc.contributor.author
Turton, Rachael Heather
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dc.contributor.sponsor
other
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dc.date.accessioned
2018-04-17T14:28:56Z
dc.date.available
2018-04-17T14:28:56Z
dc.date.issued
2017-11-30
dc.description.abstract
The representation of high-latitude surface processes and quantifying surface-climate feedbacks
are some of the most serious shortcomings of present day Arctic land surface modelling. The
energy balance of seasonally snow-covered sparse deciduous forests at high latitudes is poorly
understood and inaccurately represented within hydrological and climate models.
Snow cover plays an important role in wintertime fluxes of energy, water and carbon, controlling
the length of the active growing season and hence the overall carbon balance of Arctic
ecosystems. Snow cover is non-uniform and spatially variable, as wind redistributes snow from
areas of exposed open tundra to sheltered areas within the forest, where a deeper snowpack
develops. Low solar zenith angles, coupled with sparse deciduous leafless trees, cast shadows
across the snow surface. The spatial distribution of canopy gaps determines the timing of direct
radiation which penetrates down through the canopy to the snow surface. The forest canopy also
excludes incoming longwave radiation and yet also emits longwave radiation to the snow surface.
Consequently the forest canopy plays a key role in the radiation balance of sparse forests.
To improve our knowledge of these complex processes, meteorological and field observations
were taken in an area of highly heterogeneous birch Betula pubescens ssp. czerepanovii forest
in Abisko, Sweden during the spring of 2008 and 2009. Detailed measurements of short and
longwave radiation above and below the canopy, hemispherical photographs, tree temperatures
and snow surveys were conducted to quantify the radiation balance of the sparse deciduous forest.
An array of below canopy pyranometers found the mean canopy transmissivity to be 74 % in 2008
and 76 % in 2009. Hemispherical photographs taken at the pyranometer locations analysed with
Gap Light Analyzer (GLA) showed reasonable agreement with a mean canopy transmissivity of
75 % in 2008 and 74 % in 2009. The canopy transmissivity was found to be independent of the
diffuse fraction of radiation as the canopy is very sparse.
A series of survey grids and transects were established to scale up from the below canopy
pyranometers to the landscape scale. Hemispherical photographs analysed with GLA showed the
sparse forest canopy had a mean transmissivity of 78 % and a mean LAI of 0.25, whereas the
open tundra had a mean transmissivity of 97 % and a mean LAI of < 0.01. Snow surveys showed
the sparse forest snow depth to vary between 0.34 and 0.55 m, whereas the snow depth in the
open tundra varied between 0.12 and 0.18 m.
Observations of canopy temperatures showed a strong influence of incident shortwave radiation
warming the tree branches to temperatures up to 15 °C warmer than ambient air temperature on
the south facing sides of the trees, and up to 6 °C on the north facing sides of the trees.
To reproduce the observed radiation balance, two canopy models (Homogenous and Clumped)
were developed. The Homogeneous canopy model assumes a single tree tile with a uniform
sparse canopy. The Clumped canopy model assumes a tree and a grass tile, where the tree tile
is permanently in shade from the canopy and the grass tile receives all the incoming radiation.
These canopy models identified the need for a parameter that accounts for the spatial and temporal
variation of the shaded gaps within the sparse forest.
JULES (Joint UK Land Environment Simulator) is the community land surface model used in the
UK Hadley Centre GCM suite. Modifications of the land-surface interactions were included in
JULES to represent the shaded gaps within the sparse deciduous forest. New parameterisations
were developed for the time-varying sunlit fractions of the gap (flit), the sky-view fraction (fv),
and the longwave radiation emitted from the canopy (LWtree). These model developments were
informed by field observations of the forest canopy and evaluated against the below canopy
short and longwave radiation observed data sets. The JULES Shaded gap model output showed
a strong positive relationship with the observations of below canopy shortwave and longwave
radiation. The JULES Shaded gap model improves the ratio of observed to modelled short and
longwave radiation on sunny days compared to the JULES model. The JULES Shaded gap model
reduces the time to snow melt by 2 to 4 days compared to the JULES model, making the model
output more aligned with in-situ observational data. This shortening of the modelled snow-season
directly impacts on the simulated carbon and water balance regionally and has wider relevance at
the pan-Arctic scale.
When JULES Shaded Gap was evaluated on the global scale, it improved the modelled snowmass
across large areas of sparse forest in northern Canada, Scandinavia and Northern Russia with
respect to GlobSnow. The performance of the land surface-snow-vegetation interactions of
JULES was improved by using the Shaded gap to model the radiation balance of sparse forests in
climate-sensitive Arctic regions. Furthermore these observational data can be used to develop and
evaluate high latitude land-surface processes and biogeochemical feedbacks in other earth system
models.
en
dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/29567
dc.language.iso
en
dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
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dc.subject
radiation
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dc.subject
sparse
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dc.subject
forest
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dc.subject
land surface model
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dc.subject
snow
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dc.subject
modelling
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dc.subject
JULES
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dc.subject
shaded gap
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dc.subject
shortwave
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dc.subject
longwave
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dc.subject
snow melt
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dc.subject
transmissivity
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dc.subject
hemispherical photography
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dc.subject
snow surveys
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dc.subject
Arctic
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dc.subject
surface processes
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dc.subject
high latitude
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dc.subject
canopy
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dc.subject
birch
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dc.subject
radiation
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dc.subject
sparse
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dc.subject
forest
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dc.subject
land surface model
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dc.subject
snow
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dc.subject
modelling
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dc.subject
JULES
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dc.subject
shaded gap
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dc.subject
shortwave
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dc.subject
longwave
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dc.subject
snow melt
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dc.subject
transmissivity
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dc.subject
hemispherical photography
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dc.subject
snow surveys
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dc.subject
Arctic
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dc.subject
surface processes
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dc.subject
high latitude
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dc.subject
canopy
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dc.subject
birch
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dc.subject
Global Change Research Institute
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dc.title
Impact of the radiation balance on snowmelt in a sparse deciduous birch forest
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dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
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dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
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dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
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