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Implementation of Groundwater Lateral Flow and Human Water Regulation in CAS‐FGOALS‐g3.

Authors :
Wang, Longhuan
Xie, Zhenghui
Xie, Jinbo
Zeng, Yujin
Liu, Shuang
Jia, Binghao
Qin, Peihua
Li, Lijuan
Wang, Bin
Yu, Yongqiang
Dong, Li
Wang, Yan
Li, Ruichao
Liu, Bin
Chen, Si
Source :
Journal of Geophysical Research. Atmospheres; 9/27/2020, Vol. 125 Issue 18, p1-24, 24p
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Both groundwater lateral flow (GLF) and human water regulation (HWR) significantly impact hydrological processes, climate, and even socioeconomic sustainable development. Reasonably representing these processes in climate system models is vital for improving hydrological predication and climate modeling. In this study, schemes including GLF and HWR were implemented into the Flexible Global Ocean‐Atmosphere‐Land System model grid‐point version 3 (CAS‐FGOALS‐g3) to investigate the hydroclimatic effects of GLF and HWR. Three groups of simulations using CAS‐FGOALS‐g3 were conducted for the period from 1976 to 2010. Comparisons between the simulations and the observations show their good performance in reproducing the hydrological processes. Results show that soil moisture and latent heat flux increased when GLF was included in the western United States, northern Australia, and northern South America, along with a shallower water table depth. The largest increases in latent flux are located in regions without water and energy limitations. Increased summer precipitation occurred in the western United States due to the wetting and cooling effects of GLF. Latent heat flux significantly increases in three key regions of the world (central United States, north China plain, and northern India), caused by wetting surface soil due to irrigation. The atmosphere also responded to HWR, with cooling at the 850 hPa level over northern India and Pakistan. Decreased precipitation occurred in India because the upward movement was weaker as a result of HWR. GLF can replenish the groundwater depression cone caused by overexploitation, especially in thick aquifers. Plain Language Summary: Groundwater lateral flow and human water regulation significantly impact hydrological processes and climate. In this study, we implemented the schemes including groundwater lateral flow and human water regulation into the Flexible Global Ocean‐Atmosphere‐Land System model to investigate the hydroclimatic effects of groundwater lateral flow and human water regulation. Comparisons between the simulations and the observations show their good performance in reproducing the hydrological processes. Groundwater lateral flow can replenish the groundwater depression cone caused by overexploitation, especially in thick aquifers. Human water regulation weakens the upward movement in India and reduces the summer precipitation. Both groundwater lateral flow and human water regulation affect soil moisture and energy fluxes at the land surface. These results suggest that groundwater lateral flow and human water regulation, which are generally simplified or excluded in climate system models, may provide missing parts for modeling water and energy fluxes and improving water management. Key Points: Schemes including groundwater lateral flow and human water regulation were coupled with CAS‐FGOALS‐g3 to study the hydroclimate effectsBoth groundwater lateral flow and human water use affect land energy fluxes by changing soil moistureHuman water use weakens the upward movement in India and reduces the summer precipitation [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2169897X
Volume :
125
Issue :
18
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Journal of Geophysical Research. Atmospheres
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
146079544
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1029/2019JD032289