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Interaction Between Ecohydrologic Dynamics and Microtopographic Variability Under Climate Change
Author(s) -
Le Phong V. V.,
Kumar Praveen
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
water resources research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.863
H-Index - 217
eISSN - 1944-7973
pISSN - 0043-1397
DOI - 10.1002/2017wr020377
Subject(s) - evapotranspiration , ponding , environmental science , ecohydrology , vegetation (pathology) , hydrology (agriculture) , climate change , atmospheric sciences , row crop , ecology , ecosystem , agriculture , geology , drainage , medicine , geotechnical engineering , pathology , biology
Vegetation acclimation resulting from elevated atmospheric CO 2 concentration, along with response to increased temperature and altered rainfall pattern, is expected to result in emergent behavior in ecologic and hydrologic functions. We hypothesize that microtopographic variability, which are landscape features typically of the length scale of the order of meters, such as topographic depressions, will play an important role in determining this dynamics by altering the persistence and variability of moisture. To investigate these emergent ecohydrologic dynamics, we develop a modeling framework, Dhara , which explicitly incorporates the control of microtopographic variability on vegetation, moisture, and energy dynamics. The intensive computational demand from such a modeling framework that allows coupling of multilayer modeling of the soil‐vegetation continuum with 3‐D surface‐subsurface flow processes is addressed using hybrid CPU‐GPU parallel computing framework. The study is performed for different climate change scenarios for an intensively managed agricultural landscape in central Illinois, USA, which is dominated by row‐crop agriculture, primarily soybean ( Glycine max ) and maize ( Zea mays ). We show that rising CO 2 concentration will decrease evapotranspiration, thus increasing soil moisture and surface water ponding in topographic depressions. However, increased atmospheric demand from higher air temperature overcomes this conservative behavior resulting in a net increase of evapotranspiration, leading to reduction in both soil moisture storage and persistence of ponding. These results shed light on the linkage between vegetation acclimation under climate change and microtopography variability controls on ecohydrologic processes.

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