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Modified treatment of intercepted snow improves the simulated forest albedo in the Canadian Land Surface Scheme
Author(s) -
Bartlett Paul A.,
Verseghy Diana L.
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
hydrological processes
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.222
H-Index - 161
eISSN - 1099-1085
pISSN - 0885-6087
DOI - 10.1002/hyp.10431
Subject(s) - snow , albedo (alchemy) , environmental science , interception , boreal , evergreen , wind speed , atmospheric sciences , black spruce , taiga , canopy , leaf area index , meteorology , geography , ecology , forestry , geology , art , performance art , art history , archaeology , biology
The Canadian Land Surface Scheme (CLASS) was modified to correct an underestimation of the winter albedo in evergreen needleleaf forests. Default values for the visible and near‐infrared albedo of a canopy with intercepted snow, α VIS,cs and α NIR,cs , respectively, were too small, and the fraction of the canopy covered with snow, f snow , increased too slowly with interception, producing a damped albedo response. A new model for f snow is based on z I* , the effective depth of newly intercepted snow required to increase the canopy albedo to its maximum, which corresponds in the model with f snow = 1. Snow unloading rates were extracted from visual assessments of photographs and modelled based on relationships with meteorological variables, replacing the time‐based method employed in CLASS. These parameterizations were tested in CLASS version 3.6 at boreal black spruce and jack pine forests in Saskatchewan, Canada, a subalpine Norway spruce and silver fir forest at Alptal, Switzerland, and a boreal maritime forest at Hitsujigaoka, Japan. Model configurations were assessed based on the index of agreement, d , relating simulated and observed daily albedo. The new model employs α VIS,cs = 0.27, α NIR,cs = 0.38 and z I* = 3 cm. The best single‐variable snow unloading algorithm, determined by the average cross‐site d , was based on wind speed. Two model configurations employing ensemble averages of the unloading rate as a function of total incoming radiation and wind speed, and air temperature and wind speed, respectively, produced larger minimum cross‐site d values but a smaller average. The default configuration of CLASS 3.6 produced a cross‐site average d from October to April of 0.58. The best model employing a single parameter (wind speed at the canopy top) for modelling the unloading rate produced an average d of 0.86, while the two‐parameter ensemble‐average unloading models produced a minimum d of 0.81 and an average d of 0.84. © 2015 Her Majesty the Queen in Right of Canada. Hydrological Processes published by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.