Evaluation of CMIP climate model hydrological output for the Mississippi River Basin using GRACE satellite observations

被引:25
|
作者
Freedman, Frank R. [1 ]
Pitts, Katherine L. [1 ]
Bridger, Alison F. C. [1 ]
机构
[1] San Jose State Univ, Dept Meteorol & Climate Sci, San Jose, CA 95192 USA
关键词
Global climate models; Terrestrial water storage; Satellite observations; CMIP5; GRACE; Mississippi River Basin; TERRESTRIAL WATER STORAGE; LAND-SURFACE MODEL; SOIL-MOISTURE; VARIABILITY; GROUNDWATER; AMAZON; TRENDS; SCALE; CYCLE;
D O I
10.1016/j.jhydrol.2014.10.036
中图分类号
TU [建筑科学];
学科分类号
0813 ;
摘要
We use measurements of terrestrial water storage (TWS) inferred from Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) satellite observations to evaluate the hydrological output composite-averaged over the Mississippi River Basin (MSRB) and over the ten-year period 2003-2012 from a subset of GCMs from the World Climate Research Programme's Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 5 (CMIP5) and Phase 3 (CMIP3). We then investigate mid-20th to 21st century hydrological trends over the MSRB projected by the CMIP5 models. Improvements were found in CMIP5 simulations of the annual cycle of composite TWS, estimated as the sum of modeled depth-integrated soil moisture and snow water, over those of CMIP3 when compared with the GRACE composite TWS cycle. These improvements coincide with higher horizontal resolution and changes in hydrological parameterizations applied in most of the CMIP5 GCMs compared to earlier CMIP3 versions. Simulated values of composite hydrological budget terms among CMIP5 models, however, are not improved overall, with some models exhibiting increased precipitation and others decreased runoff from CMIP3 to CMIP5 to values outside long-term observed ranges. Since the effect of both increased precipitation and decreased runoff is to increase infiltration and soil water retention, the composite TWS annual cycles from these CMIP5 models, whose earlier CMIP3 simulations in some cases highly underestimated TWS annual cycle amplitudes compared to GRACE, now better agree with GRACE. In spite of the improved prediction of the composite TWS annual cycle, multi-decadal hydrological trends for the MSRB produced by the CMIP5 models vary. A consensus for future decreasing soil moisture is found among models, but with varied responses in magnitude as well as in direction of annual precipitation, evapotranspiration and runoff trends. Overall, GRACE data appear highly useful for evaluating GCM hydrological predictions over large river basins, and a longer time period of these data as more retrievals become available should help to evaluate GCM hydrological output on a multi-decadal time scale. (C) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:3566 / 3577
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Evaluation of the hydrological cycle over the Mississippi River basin as simulated by the Canadian regional climate model (CRCM)
    Music, Biljana
    Caya, Daniel
    [J]. JOURNAL OF HYDROMETEOROLOGY, 2007, 8 (05) : 969 - 988
  • [2] Climate change impact assessment of a river basin using CMIP5 climate models and the VIC hydrological model
    Hengade, Narendra
    Eldho, T. I.
    Ghosh, Subimal
    [J]. HYDROLOGICAL SCIENCES JOURNAL-JOURNAL DES SCIENCES HYDROLOGIQUES, 2018, 63 (04): : 596 - 614
  • [3] Assessment of the WATCLASS hydrological model result of the Mackenzie River basin using the GRACE satellite total water storage measurement
    Yirdaw, Sitotaw Z.
    Snelgrove, Kenneth R.
    Seglenieks, Frank R.
    Agboma, Clement O.
    Soulis, Eric D.
    [J]. HYDROLOGICAL PROCESSES, 2009, 23 (23) : 3391 - 3400
  • [4] Hydrological evaluation of the Noah-MP land surface model for the Mississippi River Basin
    Cai, Xitian
    Yang, Zong-Liang
    David, Cedric H.
    Niu, Guo-Yue
    Rodell, Matthew
    [J]. JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES, 2014, 119 (01) : 23 - 38
  • [5] Estimating Snow Mass and Peak River Flows for the Mackenzie River Basin Using GRACE Satellite Observations
    Wang, Shusen
    Zhou, Fuqun
    Russell, Hazen A. J.
    [J]. REMOTE SENSING, 2017, 9 (03)
  • [6] Leveraging multi-variable observations to reduce and quantify the output uncertainty of a global hydrological model: evaluation of three ensemble-based approaches for the Mississippi River basin
    Doell, Petra
    Hasan, Howlader Mohammad Mehedi
    Schulze, Kerstin
    Gerdener, Helena
    Boerger, Lara
    Shadkam, Somayeh
    Ackermann, Sebastian
    Hosseini-Moghari, Seyed-Mohammad
    Schmied, Hannes Mueller
    Guentner, Andreas
    Kusche, Juergen
    [J]. HYDROLOGY AND EARTH SYSTEM SCIENCES, 2024, 28 (10) : 2259 - 2295
  • [7] Evaluation and Projection of Climate Change in the Second Songhua River Basin Using CMIP6 Model Simulations
    Xiao, Heng
    Zhuo, Yue
    Sun, Hong
    Pang, Kaiwen
    An, Zhijia
    [J]. ATMOSPHERE, 2023, 14 (09)
  • [8] Radiation budgets in the Mackenzie River basin: Retrieval from satellite observations and an evaluation of the Canadian regional climate model
    Feng, J
    Leighton, H
    MacKay, M
    [J]. JOURNAL OF HYDROMETEOROLOGY, 2003, 4 (04) : 731 - 747
  • [9] Hydrological Evaluation of Lake Chad Basin Using Space Borne and Hydrological Model Observations
    Buma, Willibroad Gabila
    Lee, Sang-Il
    Seo, Jae Young
    [J]. WATER, 2016, 8 (05)
  • [10] Projecting Hydrological Responses to Climate Change Using CMIP6 Climate Scenarios for the Upper Huai River Basin, China
    Bian, Guodong
    Zhang, Jianyun
    Chen, Jie
    Song, Mingming
    He, Ruimin
    Liu, Cuishan
    Liu, Yanli
    Bao, Zhenxin
    Lin, Qianguo
    Wang, Guoqing
    [J]. FRONTIERS IN ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE, 2021, 9