Noah S. Diffenbaugh
Atmosphere-land cover feedbacks alter the response
of surface
temperature to CO2 forcing in the western United States
Climate Dynamics, 24(2-3),
237-251, 2005.
In order to test the sensitivity of regional
climate to regional-scale atmosphere-land cover feedbacks, we
have employed a regional climate model asynchronously coupled
to an equilibrium vegetation model, focusing on the western United
States as a case study. CO2-induced atmosphere-land cover feedbacks
resulted in statistically significant seasonal temperature changes
of up to 3.5 ¾C, with land cover change accounting for up to 60
% of the total seasonal response to elevated atmospheric CO2 levels.
In many areas, such as the Great Basin, albedo acted as the primary
control on changes in surface temperature. Along the central coast
of California, soil moisture effects magnified the temperature
response in JJA and SON, with negative surface soil moisture anomalies
accompanied by negative evaporation anomalies, decreasing latent
heating and further increasing surface temperature. Additionally,
negative temperature anomalies were calculated at high elevation
in California and Oregon in DJF, MAM and SON, indicating that
future warming of these sensitive areas could be mitigated by
changes in vegetation distribution and an associated muting of
winter snow-temperature feedbacks. Precipitation anomalies were
almost universally not statistically significant, and very little
change in mean seasonal atmospheric circulation occurred in response
to atmosphere-land cover feedbacks. Further, the mean regional
temperature sensitivity to regional-scale land cover feedbacks
did not exceed the large-scale sensitivity calculated elsewhere,
indicating that spatial heterogeneity does not introduce non-linearities
in the response of regional climate to CO2-induced atmosphere-land
cover feedbacks.
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