AI Article Synopsis

  • The PLUMBER project highlighted the importance of setting performance targets in comparing land surface models, revealing that these models often perform worse than simpler empirical models for predicting turbulent energy fluxes.
  • All land surface models struggled more with predicting sensible and latent heat fluxes compared to linear regressions based on various atmospheric conditions, such as downward shortwave radiation, air temperature, and humidity.
  • The study investigated factors influencing these outcomes, ruling out energy conservation issues in observational data, and determined that the challenges stem from how models partition sensible and latent heat, suggesting this problem exists across many models and indicating directions for future research.

Article Abstract

The PALS Land sUrface Model Benchmarking Evaluation pRoject (PLUMBER) illustrated the value of prescribing performance targets in model intercomparisons. It showed that the performance of turbulent energy flux predictions from different land surface models, at a broad range of flux tower sites using common evaluation metrics, was on average worse than relatively simple empirical models. For sensible heat fluxes, all land surface models were outperformed by a linear regression against downward shortwave radiation. For latent heat flux, all land surface models were outperformed by a regression against downward shortwave, surface air temperature and relative humidity. These results are explored here in greater detail and possible causes are investigated. We examine whether particular metrics or sites unduly influence the collated results, whether results change according to time-scale aggregation and whether a lack of energy conservation in flux tower data gives the empirical models an unfair advantage in the intercomparison. We demonstrate that energy conservation in the observational data is not responsible for these results. We also show that the partitioning between sensible and latent heat fluxes in LSMs, rather than the calculation of available energy, is the cause of the original findings. Finally, we present evidence suggesting that the nature of this partitioning problem is likely shared among all contributing LSMs. While we do not find a single candidate explanation for why land surface models perform poorly relative to empirical benchmarks in PLUMBER, we do exclude multiple possible explanations and provide guidance on where future research should focus.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5884676PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1175/JHM-D-15-0171.1DOI Listing

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