Fig. 2 Changes in monthly ET and mean ET/PET ratio during wet (2006) and dry (2007) growing seasons between steppe (DS) and cultivated steppe (DC, cropland),

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Land Surface Evaporation 1. Key research issues 2. What we learnt from OASIS 3. Land surface evaporation using remote sensing 4. Data requirements Helen.
Advertisements

Responses of terrestrial ecosystems to drought
Reducing Canada's vulnerability to climate change - ESS Variation of land surface albedo and its simulation Shusen Wang Andrew Davidson Canada Centre for.
Watershed Hydrology, a Hawaiian Prospective: Evapotranspiration Ali Fares, PhD Evaluation of Natural Resource Management, NREM 600 UHM-CTAHR-NREM.
Climate Change Impacts on the Water Cycle Emmanouil Anagnostou Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering Environmental Engineering Program UCONN.
GISP 2003 / Khon Keaen, Thailand1 Summary and Follow on of GAME- Siberia Activity Takeshi OHTA Nagoya University, JAPAN FORSGC, JAPAN.
Carbon flux at the scale up field of GLBRC. The Eddy Covariance cluster towers Terenzio Zenone 1 Jiquan Chen 1 Burkhard Wilske 1 and Mike Deal 1 Kevin.
Princeton University Global Evaluation of a MODIS based Evapotranspiration Product Eric Wood Hongbo Su Matthew McCabe.
Outline Background, climatology & variability Role of snow in the global climate system Indicators of climate change Future projections & implications.
Climate and Terrestrial Biodiversity
CSIRO LAND and WATER Estimation of Spatial Actual Evapotranspiration to Close Water Balance in Irrigation Systems 1- Key Research Issues 2- Evapotranspiration.
Findings from a decade-plus study of comparative carbon, water and energy fluxes from an oak savanna and an annual grassland in the Mediterranean climate.
An Analysis of the Pollutant Loads and Hydrological Condition for Water Quality Improvement for the Weihe River For implementing water resources management.
2008 Intensive Observation Period in Arid/Semi-arid China—MAIRS Contribution to AMY Ailikun, Congbin FU International Program Office of MAIRS Chinese Academy.
Epistemology of desertification and the ecosystem service paradigm Maurizio Sciortino ECSAC Conference August 2012.
Effects of Land Cover Change on local and regional climate Ann Thijs Physical Climatology December 1, 2005 Tropical deforestation, Borneo.
Landscape Ecology and Ecosystem Science (LEES) Lab Department of Environmental Sciences The University of Toledo Regional Climate Change and Vegetation.
Optimising ORCHIDEE simulations at tropical sites Hans Verbeeck LSM/FLUXNET meeting June 2008, Edinburgh LSCE, Laboratoire des Sciences du Climat et de.
Figure 1: Schematic representation of the VIC model. 2. Model description Hydrologic model The VIC macroscale hydrologic model [Liang et al., 1994] solves.
Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory Review June 30 - July 2, 2009 Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory Review June 30 - July 2, 2009.
Effects of Land Use Change on the Energy and Water Balance of the Semi-Arid Region of Inner Mongolia, China US Institutions: Jiquan Chen & Asko Noormets.
An empirical formulation of soil ice fraction based on in situ observations Mark Decker, Xubin Zeng Department of Atmospheric Sciences, the University.
1. Introduction 3. Global-Scale Results 2. Methods and Data Early spring SWE for historic ( ) and future ( ) periods were simulated. Early.
The role of vegetation-climate interaction on Africa under climate change - literature review seminar Minchao Wu Supervisor: Markku Rummukainen, Guy Schurgers.
Development of the Temperate Shrub Submodel for the Community Land Model-Dynamic Global Vegetation Model (CLM-DGVM) Xubin Zeng Xiaodong Zeng Mike Barlage.
Changes and Feedbacks of Land-use and Land-cover under Global Change Mingjie Shi Physical Climatology Course, 387H The University of Texas at Austin, Austin,
A process-based, terrestrial biosphere model of ecosystem dynamics (Hybrid v. 3.0) A. D. Friend, A.K. Stevens, R.G. Knox, M.G.R. Cannell. Ecological Modelling.
USCCC Study Sites in the U.S.A. Carbon, Water, and Energy Fluxes at USCCC Sites Jiquan Chen, University of Toledo, Toledo, OH 43560; Phone: ,
Why Establish an Ecosystem-Atmosphere Flux Measurement Network in India? Dennis Baldocchi ESPM/Ecosystem Science Div. University of California, Berkeley.
BIOME-BGC estimates fluxes and storage of energy, water, carbon, and nitrogen for the vegetation and soil components of terrestrial ecosystems. Model algorithms.
FACULTY OF AGRICULTURE AND ENVIRONMENT Quantitative assessment of the relative role of climate change and human activities in grassland degradation: Application.
The impacts of land mosaics and human activity on ecosystem productivity Jeanette Eckert.
A detailed look at the MOD16 ET algorithm Natalie Schultz Heat budget group meeting 7/11/13.
Translation to the New TCO Panel Beverly Law Prof. Global Change Forest Science Science Chair, AmeriFlux Network Oregon State University.
Development and evaluation of Passive Microwave SWE retrieval equations for mountainous area Naoki Mizukami.
Water and Carbon Cycles in Heterogeneous Landscapes: An Ecosystem Perspective Chapter 4 How water and carbon cycles connect the organizational levels of.
Advanced Hydrology Lecture 1: Water Balance 1:30 pm, May 12, 2011 Lecture: Pat YEH Special-appointed Associate Professor, OKI Lab., IIS (Institute of Industrial.
Evaluating trends in irrigation water requirement per unit are in north region of China, : should stations being classified according to land.
Simulated Interactions of Soil Moisture, Drought Stress, and Regional Climate in the Amazon Basin Scott Denning 1, Jun Liu 1, Ian Baker 1, Maria Assun.
Kevin Czajkowski, Richard Becker, Changliang Shao Jiquan Chen, Carol Stepien, Thomas Bridgeman, Housen Chu 4/24/2014.
Variation of Surface Soil Moisture and its Implications Under Changing Climate Conditions 1.
Paper 1: UHI from Beijing Jin, S. M. 2012: Developing an Index to Measure Urban Heat Island Effect Using Satellite Land Skin Temperature and Land Cover.
Physical and Biological Processes that Controls Water Vapor Exchange between Vegetation and the Atmosphere Dennis Baldocchi Department of Environmental.
Evapotranspiration Partitioning in Land Surface Models By: Ben Livneh.
Carbon sequestration due to the abandonment of croplands in the former USSR since 1990 Nicolas VUICHARD (1) Luca BELELLI (1) Irina KURGANOVA (2) Philippe.
Aihui Wang, Kaiyuan Li, and Dennis P. Lettenmaier Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Washington Integration of the VIC model.
Printed by Introduction: The nature of surface-atmosphere interactions are affected by the land surface conditions. Lakes (open water.
AAG 2010 Washington DC Savanna Vegetation Changes as Influenced by Climate in East Africa Gopal Alagarswamy, Chuan Qin, Jiaguo Qi, Jeff Andresen, Jennifer.
Evaluation and simulation of global terrestrial latent heat flux by merging CMIP5 climate models and surface eddy covariance observations Yunjun Yao 1,
PARTITIONING ET INTO E AND T USING CHAMBERS C. A. Garcia, D. I. Stannard, B. J. Andraski, M.J. Johnson.
Natural and human induced changes in the water cycle: Relative magnitudes and trends Dennis P. Lettenmaier Department of Geography University of California,
Deforestation and the Stream Flow of the Amazon River -- Land Surface Processes and Atmospheric Feedbacks Michael T. Coe1, Marcos Heil Costa2, and Britaldo.
Climate Sensitivity of Thinleaf Alder Growth in Interior Alaska: Implications for N-Fixation Inputs to River Floodplains Dana Nossov 1,2, Roger Ruess 1,
Biases in land surface models Yingping Wang CSIRO Marine and Atmospheric Research.
Goal: to understand carbon dynamics in montane forest regions by developing new methods for estimating carbon exchange at local to regional scales. Activities:
Landscape Ecology (EEES4760 & EEES6760) DES, University of Toledo, Spring 2009 Instructor: Dr. Jiquan Chen, Ph: ;
Seasonal Emissions of N 2 O, NO, CO and CO 2 in Brazilian Savannas Subjected to Prescribed Fires Alexandre Pinto, Mercedes Bustamante, Laura Viana, Universidade.
Vladimir and Elena Aizen, Arzhan Surazakov
Multiple Equilibrium States and the Abrupt Transitions in a Dynamical System of Soil Water Interacting with Vegetation David X.D. Zeng 1, Xubin Zeng 1,
Energy balance closure at four forest sites in Wisconsin Nan Lu LEES Lab, University of Toledo 10/27/06.
Whats new with MODIS NPP and GPP MODIS/VIIRS Science Team Meeting May 20, 2015 Steven W. Running Numerical Terradynamic Simulation Group College of Forestry.
Arctic RIMS & WALE (Regional, Integrated Hydrological Monitoring System & Western Arctic Linkage Experiment) John Kimball FaithAnn Heinsch Steve Running.
Physical and Biological Processes that Controls Water Vapor Exchange between Vegetation and the Atmosphere Dennis Baldocchi Department of Environmental.
Global Pattern of Rain Use Efficiency and Its Impact Factors Instructor: Hongyan Liu Qiuyi Wang.
Hydraulic Redistribution of Soil Water in a Drained Loblolly Pine Plantation: Quantifying Patterns and Controls over Soil-to-Root and Canopy-to-Atmosphere.
Marcos Heil Costa Universidade Federal de Viçosa
Analysis of influencing factors on Budyko parameter and the application of Budyko framework in future runoff change projection EGU Weiguang Wang.
By: Paul A. Pellissier, Scott V. Ollinger, Lucie C. Lepine
Uncertainty between simulations
Investigating land-climate interactions across land cover types
Presentation transcript:

Fig. 2 Changes in monthly ET and mean ET/PET ratio during wet (2006) and dry (2007) growing seasons between steppe (DS) and cultivated steppe (DC, cropland), and fenced steppe (XF) and heavily grazed steppe (XD, degraded) in Inner Mongolia. Fig. 3 Correlation between ET from poplar plantation (K04) and shrub land (K05)(growing season 2006): Non-gap-filled isochronal 30-min averages screened for stepwise focused parameter similarity between sites : Linear regressions (a)-(c) difference in T<1°C, (a) differences in soil moisture □=19-22% and Δ=17% Symbols ■, ▲restrict further “Rn<1 Wm -2 ”. Regressions (b=■) and (c=▲) were further filtered for differences in u <1 ms -1, VPD<1%, and during daytime only. Fig.4 Increased water discharge with poplar plantations growing on former semiarid shrub land. In our example, ET of a natural shrub land has no signi- ficant effect (upper panel) on water discharge in the area. A 6-yr year old poplar plantation (mid panel) and one close to crown closure (lower panel) will discharge water equivalent to 6.5% and 15% of the Yellow River mean stream ( Fig. 5 Seasonal patterns of 5-day averages of midday mean LE/LEeq, Bowen ratio (β), canopy conductance (g c ) and decoupling coefficient (Ω) of four sites in Inner Mongolia, from 1 Dec 2005 to 31 Nov Midday means include 10: :00 h local standard time. Fig. 6 Spatial variability of Rn and soil heat flux (G+S) contribute to energy enclosure at steppe sites in IM: Upper and lower bound of the gray band represent (Rn max –(G=S) min ) and (Rn min – (G=S) max ), respectively (of 8 plots). Lessons learned from “Effects of Land Use Change (LUC) on the Energy and Water Balance of the Semi-Arid Region of Inner Mongolia, China” Burkhard Wilske, Nan Lu, Ranjeet John and Jiquan Chen (Univ. of Toledo) Project PIs & Collaborators: Asko Noormets, Steve McNulty, Ge Sun (USDA Southern Global Change Program), Guanghui Lin, Yanfen Wang (Inst. of Botany - Chinese Acad. of Sciences, IBCAS), Xiangming Xiao (Univ. of New Hampshire), Jiaguo Qi (MI State Univ.), Dennis Ojima, Scott Denning (Colorado State Univ.), Ke Guo, Jian Ni, Xingguo Han, Osbert Sun, and Linhao Li (IBCAS) Introduction LUC – Energy balance LUC – Water balance Cultivation of grasslands decreased ecosystem evapotranspiration (ET) by 15% and 7% during wet and dry years, respectively. Grazing decreased ET by 13% and 0% during wet and dry years, respectively (Fig. 2). Reduction in annual ET under both regimes was apparently associated with changes in canopy surface conductance, soil water holding capacity and reduced soil moisture. Decreased ET/PET (Potential ET) ratios suggest less drought stress of the vegetation in the affected areas. The human-induced changes in ET seemingly relaxed the water balance, which is in contradiction to observed desertification processes with increased grazing and cultivation. Large-scale plantations of poplar trees, established to combat desertification, increased ET as compared with natural shrubland (i.e., the vegetation cover developing under lower water availability than required for a grassland) (Fig. 3). Increased ET with poplars in semi-arid IM is only possible through irrigation or with trees tapping groundwater. We calculated that large plantations along the Yellow River will consume a water volume equivalent to % of its mean stream flow. Thus, growth of extensive plan-tations can significantly reduce groundwater levels and increase drought stress in the area (Fig. 4). l Seasonal changes in net radiation (Rn), Latent heat (LE), sensible heat (H) and soil heat (G) at cultivated, overgrazed and control sites (natural steppe) were similar in showing very low values during the snow cover from December to February and increasing trends in the growing season. l Large decreases in stomatal conductance (g c ) obviously limited the LE partitioning of available energy (Rn-G) in these semi-arid ecosystems and hence human-disturbed sites showed a decreased LE fraction within a shorter phenological period (Fig. 5). l Reductions in g c and the decoupling factor (Ω) in the cropland as well as the degraded steppe suggested that LUC could depress latent flux fraction and increase its sensitivity to air and soil drought. l Spatial variability of the energy balance ε as obtained from eight plots was as high as 40 Wm -2 by a daily mean (Fig. 6). Particularly for heterogeneous and/or overgrazed steppe, there still exists an urgent need to improve the energy balance closure. Inner Mongolia (IM, Autonomous Region) in northern China has a population of ~25 million and covers an area of 1.18 million km² (i.e., the area of Texas plus California). IM is composed of 41% grassland, 10% shrubland, 24% desert, 8% forest and 13% cropland (Fig. 1). Semi-arid grasslands were considered as IM’s most important renewable resource; however, land use change (LUC) and land degradation/desertification threaten this resource and thereby the overall water and energy balance of the area. The main features of LUC in IM include local overgrazing due to a reduction in nomadic lifestyle, land cultivation and irrigation for agriculture, and forestation to protect human efforts from deserti- fication. Our joint research set out to address the biophysical basis of these problems. Eddy-covariance (EC) measurements at eight exemplary sites have delivered water, carbon and energy fluxes since the end of In addition to evaluating site-to-site changes, the obtained ground data was correlated with remote sensing products to model and display feedbacks from LUC and water/energy balance on a regional scale. Cardinal Results Fig.1 Xilinhot XD, XF Duolun DC, DS Kubuqi K04, K05 (Daxing) Dongwu Sites: [NEWS 2004 NRA: NN-H-04-Z-YS-005-N]: NNG06GA70G see also posters Miao H, Chen S., Chen J, Zhang W, Zhang P, Wei L, Lin G. Cultivation and grazing altered ET and dynamics in Inner Mongolia steppes. Agricultural and Forest Meteorology, in press. Wilske B, Lu N, Wei L, Chen S, Zha T, Liu C, Xu W, Noormets A, Huang J, Wei Y, Chen J, Zhang Z, Ni J, Sun G, Guo K, McNulty S, John R, Chen J, Han X, Lin G. Poplar plantation has the potential to alter water balance in semiarid Inner Mongolia. Agricultural and Forest Meteorology, submitted 10/14/2007. Chen S, Chen J, Lin G, Zhang W, Miao H, Wei L, Huang J, Han X. Energy balance and partition in Inner Mongolia steppe ecosystems with different land use types. Agricultural and Forest Meteorology, accepted. Shao S, Chen J, Li L, Xu W, Chen S, Tenney G, Xu J, Zhang W. How do spatial variations of net radiation and soil heat flux contribute to energy enclosure at flux measurement sites. Agricultural and Forest Meteorology, accepted. Zhang WL, Chen SP, Chen J, Wei L, Han XG, Lin GH Bio-physical regulations of carbon fluxes of a steppe and a cultivated cropland in semiarid Inner Mongolia. Agricultural and Forest Meteorology 146: Lu N, John R, Wilske B, Ni J, Chen J. Impact of land cover and vegetation heterogeneity on spatial variability of surface soil moisture in a semiaird region. Agricultural and Forest Meteorology, (submitted). John R, Chen J, Lu N, Guo K, Liang C, Wei Y, Noormets A, Ma K, Han X Predicting plant diversity based on remote sensing products in the semi-arid region of Inner Mongolia. Remote Sensing of Environment 112: Main outputs NASA Carbon Cycle and Ecosystems Joint Science Workshop, Adelphi, MD, April 28 – May 2, 2008 #262 N. Lu et al., #295 R. John et al.