American Geophysical Union Become an AGU Member
Subscribe to AGU Journals
AGU Home AGU Publications

Read Full Article    Cited by

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH, VOL. 106, NO. D24, PAGES 33,649–33,670, 2001

Incorporation of a permafrost model into a large-scale ecosystem model: Evaluation of temporal and spatial scaling issues in simulating soil thermal dynamics

Q. Zhuang

Department of Biology and Wildlife, University of Alaska at Fairbanks, Fairbanks, Alaska


V. E. Romanovsky

Geophysical Institute, University of Alaska at Fairbanks, Fairbanks, Alaska


A. D. McGuire

U.S. Geological Survey, Alaska Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit, University of Alaska at Fairbanks, Fairbanks, Alaska


Abstract

This study evaluated whether a model of permafrost dynamics with a 0.5-day resolution internal time step that is driven by monthly climate inputs is adequate for representing the soil thermal dynamics in a large-scale ecosystem model. An extant version of the Goodrich model was modified to develop a soil thermal model (STM) with the capability to operate with either 0.5-hour or 0.5-day internal time steps and to be driven with either daily or monthly input data. The choice of internal time step had little effect on the simulation of soil thermal dynamics of a black spruce site in Alaska. The use of monthly climate inputs to drive the model resulted in an error of less than 1°C in the upper organic soil layer and in an accurate simulation of seasonal active layer dynamics. Uncertainty analyses of the STM driven with monthly climate inputs identified that soil temperature estimates of the upper organic layer were most sensitive to variability in parameters that described snow thermal conductivity, moss thickness, and moss thermal conductivity. The STM was coupled to the Terrestrial Ecosystem Model (TEM), and the performance of the coupled model was verified for the simulation of soil temperatures in applications to a black spruce site in Canada and to white spruce, aspen, and tundra sites in Alaska. A 1°C error in the temperature of the upper organic soil layer had little influence on the carbon dynamics simulated for the black spruce site in Canada. Application of the model across the range of black spruce ecosystems in North America demonstrated that the STM-TEM has the capability to operate over temporal and spatial domains that consider substantial variation in surface climate given that spatial variability in key structural characteristics and physical properties of the soil thermal regime are described.

Received 16 October 2000; accepted 21 February 2001.


Read Full Article    Cited by

Citation: Zhuang, Q., V. E. Romanovsky, and A. D. McGuire (2001), Incorporation of a permafrost model into a large-scale ecosystem model: Evaluation of temporal and spatial scaling issues in simulating soil thermal dynamics, J. Geophys. Res., 106(D24), 33,649–33,670.