Impact of climate model resolution on soil moisture projections in central-western Europe
Global climate models project widespread decreases in soil moisture over large parts of Europe. This paper investigates the impact of model resolution on the magnitude and seasonality of future soil drying in central-western Europe. We use the general circulation model EC-Earth to study two 30-year...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Hydrology and earth system sciences 2019-01, Vol.23 (1), p.191-206 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Global climate models project widespread
decreases in soil moisture over large parts of Europe. This paper
investigates the impact of model resolution on the magnitude and seasonality
of future soil drying in central-western Europe. We use the general
circulation model EC-Earth to study two 30-year periods representative of the
start and end of the 21st century under low-to-moderate greenhouse gas
forcing (RCP4.5). In our study area, central-western Europe, at high spatial
resolution (∼25 km) soil drying is more severe and starts earlier in
the season than at standard resolution (∼112 km). Here, changes in the
large-scale atmospheric circulation and local soil moisture feedbacks lead to
enhanced evapotranspiration in spring and reduced precipitation in summer. A
more realistic position of the storm track at high model resolution leads to
reduced biases in precipitation and temperature in the present-day
climatology, which act to amplify future changes in evapotranspiration in
spring. Furthermore, in the high-resolution model a stronger anticyclonic
anomaly over the British Isles extends over central-western Europe and
supports soil drying. The resulting drier future land induces stronger soil
moisture feedbacks that amplify drying conditions in summer. In addition,
soil-moisture-limited evapotranspiration in summer promotes sensible heating
of the boundary layer, which leads to a lower relative humidity with less
cloudy conditions, an increase in dry summer days, and more incoming solar
radiation. As a result a series of consecutive hot and dry summers appears in
the future high-resolution climate. The enhanced drying at high spatial
resolution suggests that future projections of central-western European soil
drying by CMIP5 models have been potentially underestimated. Whether these
results are robust has to be tested with other global climate models with
similar high spatial resolutions. |
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ISSN: | 1607-7938 1027-5606 1607-7938 |
DOI: | 10.5194/hess-23-191-2019 |