Thursday, March 25, 2010

Harding et al. 2001

Harding RJ, Gryning S-E, Halldin S, Lloyd CR. 2001. Progress in understanding of land surface/atmosphere exchanges at high latitudes. Theoretical and Applied Climatology 70: 5-18.

These authors review and discuss the implications of studies based in two international projects in northern Europe. WINTEX was a large study examining the effects of snow cover and long nights in winter on high-latitude ground-atmosphere exchange processes, while LAPP was an independent but complementary study examining most of the same processes in a range of high latitude sites during spring and summer.

Snow cover plays a major role in Arctic exchange processes. The high albedo of snow reflects much of the incident solar radiation, and insulates the frozen ground below, prolonging the period of snow cover to upwards of 9 months in the year in many places. Where vegetation is tall, such as in the boreal forest, the low solar angle reduces the effective net albedo of the landscape, allowing sunlight to warm the dark trees and speed springtime melting. This study mentions the importance of snow-surface aerodynamics, though it appears there is little solid information on this complex topic.

Snow melt is the major hydrological event of the year in much of the Arctic. The combination of frozen soils, very low evaporation rates, and often flat terrain means much of the Arctic is very wet or saturated while annual precipitation rates are consistent with arid or semi-arid conditions. These areas are the classic tundra systems, with abundant shallow lakes and ponds and very wet high-organic soils.

Differences in snow-surface dynamics and the timing of snowmelt create an extremely heterogeneous landscape, particularly in the vicinity of the northern treeline. There are often very large temperature and air-flow differences between patches of trees and adjacent lakes or clearings, which greatly complicate attempts to model the carbon dioxide emissions (for example) of such areas. Much of this paper is a series of evaluations of some of the models that have been applied to this region. In general, more sophisticated models that can take some of the extreme variability into account perform better than models that cannot account for differences in snow depth or insulating properties. However, this paper makes it clear that current modelling efforts still leave much to be desired in terms of predicting Arctic heat budgets and biological responses.

Water storage is also very difficult to model, and has large and variable impacts on other parts of the system. There appears to be large and unpredictable year-to-year variation in water storage and transport at the scale of catchments and basins, and the importance of soil water in controlling biological processes such as the decomposition of organic matter is large. Runoff matters, even on very gentle slopes.

This paper provides a useful overview of large-scale processes and attempts to understand these processes in the Arctic.

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