Abstracts for the 6th International GAME Conf.

3-5 December 2004

Kyoto Japan


Land surface processes and monsoon

Yongkang Xue (1)

Differential heating of the land and the ocean has greatly influenced the streng th, duration, and spatial distribution of large-scale monsoons. The land surfac e processes are crucial in modulating the monsoon processes. Several GCM studie s, which explore potential role of land surface processes in hydrometeorological predictability, have consistently shown that soil moisture and vegetation proce sses have the great impact on the climate in monsoon regions. However, differen t models exhibit very different sensitivity to the land surface forcing. Diffic ulty and challenge in study of land surface/monsoon interactions will be discuss ed. Two case studies will be presented to show how vegetation process affects intras easonal monsoon variability. We compare simulations by a NCEP GCM coupled with two different land surface parameterizations, a two-layer soil model with no exp licit vegetation representation, and a more comprehensive biophysical model. T he results show that feedbacks between vegetation and the atmosphere are crucial ly important for proper simulation of intra-seasonal monsoon evolution, includin g its intensity, the spatial distribution of precipitation, and associated circu lation at the continental scale. In the East Asian study, the role of land surface processes in the abrupt monsoo n northward jump and turning of low-level circulation has been investigated. Si mulation results suggest that vegetation processes produce different spatial dis tributions of the Bowen Ratio, in turn influencing the low-level temperature and pressure gradients, wind flow (through geostrophic balance), and moisture trans port. This process creates the great east-west thermal gradient, which may cont ribute to the abrupt northward jump of the East Asian monsoon. It also causes t he latitudinal heating gradient that contributes to the clockwise and counterclo ckwise turning of the low-level wind on the East Asian and African continents du ring the early stages of the monsoon development. In the South American case, t he impact of land surface processes on the South American monsoon system (SAMS) onset and evolution are investigated. In the SAMS simulation, the model without explicit vegetation did not produce a clear southward movement of the precipita tion in monsoon onset. Instead, it produced a very strong and early northward S AMS movement and a very wet monsoon mature season. However, these studies are based on a single GCM model and a specific year. Rec ent studies with different models show that different GCM coupled with different land models exhibit very different sensitivity to the land surface forcing. Pr oper simulations of land/atmosphere interaction are challenge and difficulty. T he factors and issues related to modeling land/atmosphere interactions will be d iscussed.

Submittal Information

Name : Date :
    Yongkang Xue
    30-Jul-04-03:44:58
Organization : Theme :
    University of California, Los Angeles
    Theme 1
Address : Presentation :
    1255 Bunche Hall, Department of Geography, UCLA, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1524
    Poster or oral
Country : Abstract ID :
    USA
    T1YX30Jul04034458
Phone : Fax :
    310-825-1122
    310-206-5976
E-mail :
    yxue@geog.ucla.edu