Long-term Trend of Evapotranspiration in Sweden Affected by Climate Change or Land-use Change.

Evapotranspiration (ET) is an essential component of water cycle as it is an interlinkage between atmosphere, vegetation and soil surface in terms of energy and water balance. However, whether potential ET has the same tendency to change as actual ET and how ET trend (based on the difference between...

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Main Author: Zhang, Wenxin
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: KTH, Biogeofysik 2011
Subjects:
HBV
Online Access:http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-96292
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spelling ndltd-UPSALLA1-oai-DiVA.org-kth-962922013-01-08T13:52:00ZLong-term Trend of Evapotranspiration in Sweden Affected by Climate Change or Land-use Change.engZhang, WenxinKTH, Biogeofysik2011EvapotranspirationRainfall-runoffCoupModelHBVClimate changeland-use changeEvapotranspiration (ET) is an essential component of water cycle as it is an interlinkage between atmosphere, vegetation and soil surface in terms of energy and water balance. However, whether potential ET has the same tendency to change as actual ET and how ET trend (based on the difference between precipitation and runoff) is directly driven by dominant meteorological factors alone or combined with ecosystem‘s feedbacks to climate change (like land-use change) is still under the discussion. In this report, five ET parameterizations within two rainfall-runoff models [Coupled Heat and Mass Transfer Model (CoupModel) and Hydrologiska Byråns Vattenbalansavdelning (HBV)] have been set up based on six subcatchments of Sweden. The scenario derived from CoupModel shows that the trend of ET is affected by the change of land-use, where soil evaporation tends to shift to transpiration and interception evaporation. However, HBV model produces the other scenario: the trend of ET is merely the consequence of meteorological factors. Increased ET is contributed by increased interception evaporation due to the increased precipitation. After identifying the time split of changing ET trends, a dynamic simulation constructed both from HBV and CoupModel indicate that the increased total ET is primarily from increased ET in winter time. More and more interceptive water loss and transpiration resulted from land-use change due to more vegetation. On the other hand, land-use change is also a feed back to climate change. Transpiration controlled by the mechanism of stomata and water uptake controlled by reduction of soil moisture is highly related to variations of climatic conditions. Student thesisinfo:eu-repo/semantics/bachelorThesistexthttp://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-96292TRITA-LWR Degree Project, 1651-064X ; LWR-EX-11-02application/pdfinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Evapotranspiration
Rainfall-runoff
CoupModel
HBV
Climate change
land-use change
spellingShingle Evapotranspiration
Rainfall-runoff
CoupModel
HBV
Climate change
land-use change
Zhang, Wenxin
Long-term Trend of Evapotranspiration in Sweden Affected by Climate Change or Land-use Change.
description Evapotranspiration (ET) is an essential component of water cycle as it is an interlinkage between atmosphere, vegetation and soil surface in terms of energy and water balance. However, whether potential ET has the same tendency to change as actual ET and how ET trend (based on the difference between precipitation and runoff) is directly driven by dominant meteorological factors alone or combined with ecosystem‘s feedbacks to climate change (like land-use change) is still under the discussion. In this report, five ET parameterizations within two rainfall-runoff models [Coupled Heat and Mass Transfer Model (CoupModel) and Hydrologiska Byråns Vattenbalansavdelning (HBV)] have been set up based on six subcatchments of Sweden. The scenario derived from CoupModel shows that the trend of ET is affected by the change of land-use, where soil evaporation tends to shift to transpiration and interception evaporation. However, HBV model produces the other scenario: the trend of ET is merely the consequence of meteorological factors. Increased ET is contributed by increased interception evaporation due to the increased precipitation. After identifying the time split of changing ET trends, a dynamic simulation constructed both from HBV and CoupModel indicate that the increased total ET is primarily from increased ET in winter time. More and more interceptive water loss and transpiration resulted from land-use change due to more vegetation. On the other hand, land-use change is also a feed back to climate change. Transpiration controlled by the mechanism of stomata and water uptake controlled by reduction of soil moisture is highly related to variations of climatic conditions.
author Zhang, Wenxin
author_facet Zhang, Wenxin
author_sort Zhang, Wenxin
title Long-term Trend of Evapotranspiration in Sweden Affected by Climate Change or Land-use Change.
title_short Long-term Trend of Evapotranspiration in Sweden Affected by Climate Change or Land-use Change.
title_full Long-term Trend of Evapotranspiration in Sweden Affected by Climate Change or Land-use Change.
title_fullStr Long-term Trend of Evapotranspiration in Sweden Affected by Climate Change or Land-use Change.
title_full_unstemmed Long-term Trend of Evapotranspiration in Sweden Affected by Climate Change or Land-use Change.
title_sort long-term trend of evapotranspiration in sweden affected by climate change or land-use change.
publisher KTH, Biogeofysik
publishDate 2011
url http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-96292
work_keys_str_mv AT zhangwenxin longtermtrendofevapotranspirationinswedenaffectedbyclimatechangeorlandusechange
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