The Representation of Snow in Land Surface Schemes: Results from PILPS 2(d)

Twenty-one land surface schemes (LSSs) performed simulations forced by 18 yr of observed meteorological data from a grassland catchment at Valdai, Russia, as part of the Project for the Intercomparison of Land-Surface Parameterization Schemes (PILPS) Phase 2(d). In this paper the authors examine the simulation of snow. In comparison with observations, the models are able to capture the broad features of the snow regime on both an intra- and interannual basis. However, weaknesses in the simulations exist, and early season ablation events are a significant source of model scatter. Over the 18-yr simulation, systematic differences between the models’ snow simulations are evident and reveal specific aspects of snow model parameterization and design as being responsible. Vapor exchange at the snow surface varies widely among the models, ranging from a large net loss to a small net source for the snow season. Snow albedo, fractional snow cover, and their interplay have a large effect on energy available for ablation, with differences among models most evident at low snow depths. The incorporation of the snowpack within an LSS structure affects the method by which snow accesses, as well as utilizes, available energy for ablation. The sensitivity of some models to longwave radiation, the dominant winter radiative flux, is partly due to a stability-induced feedback and the differing abilities of models to exchange turbulent energy with the atmosphere. Results presented in this paper suggest where weaknesses in macroscale snow modeling lie and where both theoretical and observational work should be focused to address these weaknesses.

[1]  H. Lamb Two-way relationship between the snow or ice limit and 1,000 500 mb thicknesses in the overlying atmosphere , 1955 .

[2]  Colleagues,et al.  Physical Studies on Deposited Snow. I. ; Thermal Properties. , 1955 .

[3]  K. Kojima Densification of Seasonal Snow Cover , 1967 .

[4]  M. Griggs Emissivities of natural surfaces in the 8‐ to 14‐micron spectral region , 1968 .

[5]  S. Manabe CLIMATE AND THE OCEAN CIRCULATION1 , 1969 .

[6]  W. Brutsaert On a derivable formula for long-wave radiation from clear skies , 1975 .

[7]  E. Anderson,et al.  A point energy and mass balance model of a snow cover , 1975 .

[8]  Engineering Properties of Snow , 1977 .

[9]  K. Dewey Daily Maximum and Minimum Temperature Forecasts and the Influence of Snow Cover , 1977 .

[10]  J. Monteith,et al.  Boundary Layer Climates. , 1979 .

[11]  J. Louis A parametric model of vertical eddy fluxes in the atmosphere , 1979 .

[12]  S. Warren,et al.  A Model for the Spectral Albedo of Snow. II: Snow Containing Atmospheric Aerosols , 1980 .

[13]  S. Warren,et al.  A Model for the Spectral Albedo of Snow. I: Pure Snow , 1980 .

[14]  S. Idso A set of equations for full spectrum and 8- to 14-μm and 10.5- to 12.5-μm thermal radiation from cloudless skies , 1981 .

[15]  Y. Yen Review of Thermal Properties of Snow, Ice and Sea Ice, , 1981 .

[16]  Stephen G. Warren,et al.  Optical Properties of Snow , 1982 .

[17]  A. Robock Ice and Snow Feedbacks and the Latitudinal and Seasonal Distribution of Climate Sensitivity , 1983 .

[18]  S. Manabe,et al.  A Model Study of the Short-Term Climatic and Hydrologic Effects of Sudden Snow-Cover Removal , 1983 .

[19]  J. Namias Some Empirical Evidence for the Influence of Snow Cover on Temperature and Precipitation , 1985 .

[20]  J. Kondo,et al.  Measurement of snow surface emissivity , 1986 .

[21]  E. Martin,et al.  An Energy and Mass Model of Snow Cover Suitable for Operational Avalanche Forecasting , 1989, Journal of Glaciology.

[22]  D. Verseghy,et al.  CLASS-A Canadian Land Surface Scheme for GCMs , 1993 .

[23]  K. Taylor,et al.  Interpretation of Snow-Climate Feedback as Produced by 17 General Circulation Models , 1991, Science.

[24]  Albert A. M. Holtslag,et al.  Flux Parameterization over Land Surfaces for Atmospheric Models , 1991 .

[25]  David Rind,et al.  The effect of snow cover on the climate , 1991 .

[26]  Piers J. Sellers,et al.  A Simplified Biosphere Model for Global Climate Studies , 1991 .

[27]  E. Brun,et al.  A numerical model to simulate snow-cover stratigraphy for operational avalanche forecasting , 1992, Journal of Glaciology.

[28]  W. Gates AMIP: The Atmospheric Model Intercomparison Project. , 1992 .

[29]  D. Leathers,et al.  The association between extremes in North American snow cover extent and United States temperatures , 1993 .

[30]  D. Robinson,et al.  Global Snow Cover Monitoring: An Update , 1993 .

[31]  Ann Henderson-Sellers,et al.  Biosphere-atmosphere transfer scheme(BATS) version 1e as coupled to the NCAR community climate model , 1993 .

[32]  Josef M. Oberhuber,et al.  Snow cover model for global climate simulations , 1993 .

[33]  W. Rees Infrared emissivity of Arctic winter snow , 1993 .

[34]  W. Rees Infrared emissivities of Arctic land cover types , 1993 .

[35]  Marc Lynch-Stieglitz,et al.  The development and validation of a simple snow model for the GISS GCM , 1994 .

[36]  K. Taylor,et al.  Analysis of snow feedbacks in 14 general circulation models , 1994 .

[37]  H. Treut,et al.  The albedo of temperate and boreal forest and the Northern Hemisphere climate: a sensitivity experiment using the LMD GCM , 1994 .

[38]  Thomas H. Painter,et al.  Climatic, edaphic, and biotic controls over storage and turnover of carbon in soils , 1994 .

[39]  Thomas R. Karl,et al.  Observed Impact of Snow Cover on the Heat Balance and the Rise of Continental Spring Temperatures , 1994, Science.

[40]  Stanley G. Benjamin,et al.  Comparative experiments with MAPS on different parameterization schemes for surface moisture flux and boundary-layer processes , 1994 .

[41]  Ann Henderson-Sellers,et al.  The Project for Intercomparison of Land Surface Parameterization Schemes (PILPS): Phases 2 and 3 , 1995 .

[42]  Jon Holmgren,et al.  A Seasonal Snow Cover Classification System for Local to Global Applications. , 1995 .

[43]  Jean-François Mahfouf,et al.  A new snow parameterization for the Météo-France climate model , 1995 .

[44]  J. Shukla,et al.  The Effect of Eurasian Snow Cover on the Indian Monsoon , 1995 .

[45]  A. Boone,et al.  A Parameterization for Land–Atmosphere-Cloud Exchange (PLACE): Documentation and Testing of a Detailed Process Model of the Partly Cloudy Boundary Layer over Heterogeneous Land , 1995 .

[46]  Pedro Viterbo,et al.  An Improved Land Surface Parameterization Scheme in the ECMWF Model and Its Validation. , 1995 .

[47]  Glen E. Liston,et al.  Local Advection of Momentum, Heat, and Moisture during the Melt of Patchy Snow Covers , 1995 .

[48]  Y. Xue,et al.  Use of midlatitude soil moisture and meteorological observations to validate soil moisture simulations with biosphere and bucket models , 1995 .

[49]  H. Douville,et al.  A new snow parameterization for the Météo-France climate model , 1995 .

[50]  John E. Walsh,et al.  An Assessment of Global Climate Model Simulations of Arctic Air Temperatures , 1996 .

[51]  A. Robock,et al.  Scales of temporal and spatial variability of midlatitude soil moisture , 1996 .

[52]  A. Tait,et al.  Estimation of snow water equivalent using passive microwave radiation data , 1996, IGARSS '96. 1996 International Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium.

[53]  B. Bonan,et al.  A Land Surface Model (LSM Version 1.0) for Ecological, Hydrological, and Atmospheric Studies: Technical Description and User's Guide , 1996 .

[54]  D. Randall,et al.  A Revised Land Surface Parameterization (SiB2) for Atmospheric GCMS. Part I: Model Formulation , 1996 .

[55]  J. Mahfouf,et al.  The ISBA land surface parameterisation scheme , 1996 .

[56]  J. R. Garratt,et al.  Downwelling Longwave Fluxes at Continental Surfaces-A Comparison of Observations with GCM Simulations and Implications for the Global Land-Surface Radiation Budget , 1996 .

[57]  Yongkang Xue,et al.  SSiB and its sensitivity to soil properties-A case study using HAPEX-Mobilhy data , 1996 .

[58]  C. Justice,et al.  A Revised Land Surface Parameterization (SiB2) for Atmospheric GCMS. Part II: The Generation of Global Fields of Terrestrial Biophysical Parameters from Satellite Data , 1996 .

[59]  Diana Verseghy,et al.  Snow Cover and Snow Mass Intercomparisons of General Circulation Models and Remotely Sensed Datasets , 1996 .

[60]  N. McFarlane,et al.  Parameterization of the surface-layer exchange coefficients for atmospheric models , 1996 .

[61]  Y. Xue,et al.  Modeling of land surface evaporation by four schemes and comparison with FIFE observations , 1996 .

[62]  Stanley G. Benjamin,et al.  Performance of Different Soil Model Configurations in Simulating Ground Surface Temperature and Surface Fluxes , 1997 .

[63]  K. Mitchell,et al.  Assessment of the Land Surface and Boundary Layer Models in Two Operational Versions of the NCEP Eta Model Using FIFE Data , 1997 .

[64]  Zong-Liang Yang,et al.  Validation of the Snow Submodel of the Biosphere-Atmosphere Transfer Scheme with Russian Snow Cover and Meteorological Observational Data , 1997 .

[65]  M. König,et al.  The thermal conductivity of seasonal snow , 1997, Journal of Glaciology.

[66]  Zeng Qingcun,et al.  A land surface model (IAP94) for climate studies part I: Formulation and validation in off-line experiments , 1997 .

[67]  Darrel L. Williams,et al.  BOREAS in 1997: Experiment overview, scientific results, and future directions , 1997 .

[68]  Y. Xue,et al.  18-Year Land-Surface Hydrology Model Simulations for a Midlatitude Grassland Catchment in Valdai, Russia , 1997 .

[69]  R. Essery Modelling fluxes of momentum, sensible heat and latent heat over heterogeneous snow cover , 1997 .

[70]  C. E. Desborough,et al.  The Impact of Root Weighting on the Response of Transpiration to Moisture Stress in Land Surface Schemes , 1997 .

[71]  Roni Avissar,et al.  Representation of heterogeneity effects in Earth system modeling: Experience from land surface modeling , 1997 .

[72]  C. Genthon,et al.  Studies of the Antarctic climate with a stretched-grid general circulation model , 1997 .

[73]  Jan Polcher,et al.  Modelling root water uptake in a complex land surface scheme coupled to a GCM , 1998 .

[74]  A. Shmakin The updated version of SPONSOR land surface scheme: PILPS-influenced improvements , 1998 .

[75]  Olga N. Nasonova,et al.  The land surface parameterization scheme SWAP: description and partial validation , 1998 .

[76]  A. Pitman,et al.  The validation of a snow parameterization designed for use in general circulation models , 1998 .

[77]  D. Bailey,et al.  Snow-albedo feedback and the spring transition in a regional climate system model: Influence of land surface model , 1998 .

[78]  Jon Holmgren,et al.  Differences in compaction behavior of three climate classes of snow , 1998 .

[79]  A. Lynch,et al.  On the applicability of current land surface schemes for Arctic tundra: An intercomparison study , 1998 .

[80]  D. H. Gray,et al.  An evaluation of snow accumulation and ablation processes for land surface modelling , 1998 .

[81]  A. Pitman,et al.  The BASE land surface model , 1998 .

[82]  P. Marsh,et al.  Local advection of sensible heat in the snowmelt landscape of Arctic tundra , 1998 .

[83]  R. Essery Boreal forests and snow in climate models , 1998 .

[84]  B. Mcavaney,et al.  Realisability constraints for land-surface schemes , 1998 .

[85]  Pedro Viterbo,et al.  Impact on ECMWF forecasts of changes to the albedo of the boreal forests in the presence of snow , 1999 .

[86]  S. Derbyshire Boundary-Layer Decoupling over Cold Surfaces as a Physical Boundary-Instability , 1999 .

[87]  Dara Entekhabi,et al.  Eurasian snow cover variability and northern hemisphere climate predictability , 1999 .

[88]  K. Mitchell,et al.  A parameterization of snowpack and frozen ground intended for NCEP weather and climate models , 1999 .

[89]  Glen E. Liston,et al.  Interrelationships among Snow Distribution, Snowmelt, and Snow Cover Depletion: Implications for Atmospheric, Hydrologic, and Ecologic Modeling , 1999 .

[90]  R. Betts,et al.  The impact of new land surface physics on the GCM simulation of climate and climate sensitivity , 1999 .

[91]  H. Douville,et al.  A comparison of four snow models using observations from an alpine site , 1999 .

[92]  Edgar L. Andreas,et al.  Heat budget of snow-covered sea ice at North Pole 4 , 1999 .

[93]  Jean-François Mahfouf,et al.  The representation of soil moisture freezing and its impact on the stable boundary layer , 1999 .

[94]  David Mocko,et al.  New Snow-Physics to Complement SSiB: Part I: Design and Evaluation with ISLSCP Initiative I Datasets , 1999 .

[95]  C. E. Desborough,et al.  Surface energy balance complexity in GCM land surface models , 1999 .

[96]  John W. Pomeroy,et al.  Turbulent fluxes during blowing snow: field tests of model sublimation predictions , 1999 .

[97]  R. Dickinson,et al.  Simulation of snow mass and extent in general circulation models , 1999 .

[98]  Stanley G. Benjamin,et al.  Parameterization of cold-season processes in the MAPS land-surface scheme , 2000 .