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Incorporating dynamic root growth enhances the performance of Noah-MP at two contrasting winter wheat field sites

Sebastian GaylerWater and Earth System Science Competence Cluster (WESS); Tübingen GermanyThomas WöhlingLincoln Agritech Ltd.; Ruakura Research Centre; Hamilton New ZealandMatthias GrzeschikWater and Earth System Science Competence Cluster (WESS); Tübingen GermanyJoachim IngwersenInstitute of Soil Science and Land Evaluation, Biogeophysics; University of Hohenheim; Stuttgart GermanyHans‐Dieter WizemannInstitute of Physics and Meteorology; University of Hohenheim; Stuttgart GermanyKirsten Warrach‐SagiInstitute of Physics and Meteorology; University of Hohenheim; Stuttgart GermanyPetra HögyInstitute of Landscape and Plant Ecology; University of Hohenheim; Stuttgart GermanySabine AttingerComputational Hydrosystems; UFZ-Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research; Leipzig GermanyThilo StreckInstitute of Soil Science and Land Evaluation, Biogeophysics; University of Hohenheim; Stuttgart GermanyVolker WulfmeyerInstitute of Physics and Meteorology; University of Hohenheim; Stuttgart Germany
2014en
ABI

Annotatsiya

Interactions between the soil, the vegetation, and the atmospheric boundary layer require close attention when predicting water fluxes in the hydrogeosystem, agricultural systems, weather, and climate. However, land-surface schemes used in large-scale models continue to show deficiencies in consistently simulating fluxes of water and energy from the subsurface through vegetation layers to the atmosphere. In this study, the multiphysics version of the Noah land-surface model (Noah-MP) was used to identify the processes, which are most crucial for a simultaneous simulation of water and heat fluxes between land surface and the lower atmosphere. Comprehensive field data sets of latent and sensible heat fluxes, ground heat flux, soil moisture, and leaf area index from two contrasting field sites in South-West Germany are used to assess the accuracy of simulations. It is shown that an adequate representation of vegetation-related processes is the most important control for a consistent simulation of energy and water fluxes in the soil-plant-atmosphere system. In particular, using a newly implemented submodule to simulate root growth dynamics has enhanced the performance of Noah-MP. We conclude that further advances in the representation of leaf area dynamics and root/soil moisture interactions are the most promising starting points for improving the simulation of feedbacks between the subsoil, land surface and atmosphere in fully coupled hydrological and atmospheric models.

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