Distributed modelling of climate change impacts on snow sublimation in Northern Mongolia

Sublimation of snow is an important factor of the hydrological cycle in Mongolia and is likely to increase according to future climate projections. In this study the hydrological model TRAIN was used to assess spatially distributed current and future sublimation rates based on interpolated daily dat...

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Main Authors: L. Menzel, T. aus der Beek, S. Schlaffer, F. Wimmer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2009-08-01
Series:Advances in Geosciences
Online Access:http://www.adv-geosci.net/21/117/2009/adgeo-21-117-2009.pdf
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spelling doaj-0e79be79aa2f484188b67ca6c16c2e892020-11-24T23:34:36ZengCopernicus PublicationsAdvances in Geosciences1680-73401680-73592009-08-0121117124Distributed modelling of climate change impacts on snow sublimation in Northern MongoliaL. MenzelT. aus der BeekS. SchlafferF. WimmerSublimation of snow is an important factor of the hydrological cycle in Mongolia and is likely to increase according to future climate projections. In this study the hydrological model TRAIN was used to assess spatially distributed current and future sublimation rates based on interpolated daily data of precipitation, air temperature, air humidity, wind speed and solar radiation. An automated procedure for the interpolation of the input data is provided. Depending on the meteorological parameter and the data availability for the individual days, the most appropriate interpolation method is chosen automatically from inverse distance weighting, Ordinary Least Squares interpolation, Ordinary or Universal Kriging. Depending on elevation simulated annual sublimation in the period 1986–2006 was 23 to 35 mm, i.e. approximately 80% of total snowfall. Moreover, future climate projections for 2071–2100 of ECHAM5 and HadCM3, based on the A1B emission scenario of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, were analysed with TRAIN. In the case of ECHAM5 simulated sublimation increases by up to 17% (26...41 mm) while it remains at the same level for HadCM3 (24...34 mm). The differences are mainly due to a distinct increase in winter precipitation for ECHAM5. Simulated changes of the all-season hydrological conditions, e.g. the sublimation-to-precipitation ratio, were ambiguous due to diverse precipitation patterns derived by the global circulation models. http://www.adv-geosci.net/21/117/2009/adgeo-21-117-2009.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author L. Menzel
T. aus der Beek
S. Schlaffer
F. Wimmer
spellingShingle L. Menzel
T. aus der Beek
S. Schlaffer
F. Wimmer
Distributed modelling of climate change impacts on snow sublimation in Northern Mongolia
Advances in Geosciences
author_facet L. Menzel
T. aus der Beek
S. Schlaffer
F. Wimmer
author_sort L. Menzel
title Distributed modelling of climate change impacts on snow sublimation in Northern Mongolia
title_short Distributed modelling of climate change impacts on snow sublimation in Northern Mongolia
title_full Distributed modelling of climate change impacts on snow sublimation in Northern Mongolia
title_fullStr Distributed modelling of climate change impacts on snow sublimation in Northern Mongolia
title_full_unstemmed Distributed modelling of climate change impacts on snow sublimation in Northern Mongolia
title_sort distributed modelling of climate change impacts on snow sublimation in northern mongolia
publisher Copernicus Publications
series Advances in Geosciences
issn 1680-7340
1680-7359
publishDate 2009-08-01
description Sublimation of snow is an important factor of the hydrological cycle in Mongolia and is likely to increase according to future climate projections. In this study the hydrological model TRAIN was used to assess spatially distributed current and future sublimation rates based on interpolated daily data of precipitation, air temperature, air humidity, wind speed and solar radiation. An automated procedure for the interpolation of the input data is provided. Depending on the meteorological parameter and the data availability for the individual days, the most appropriate interpolation method is chosen automatically from inverse distance weighting, Ordinary Least Squares interpolation, Ordinary or Universal Kriging. Depending on elevation simulated annual sublimation in the period 1986–2006 was 23 to 35 mm, i.e. approximately 80% of total snowfall. Moreover, future climate projections for 2071–2100 of ECHAM5 and HadCM3, based on the A1B emission scenario of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, were analysed with TRAIN. In the case of ECHAM5 simulated sublimation increases by up to 17% (26...41 mm) while it remains at the same level for HadCM3 (24...34 mm). The differences are mainly due to a distinct increase in winter precipitation for ECHAM5. Simulated changes of the all-season hydrological conditions, e.g. the sublimation-to-precipitation ratio, were ambiguous due to diverse precipitation patterns derived by the global circulation models.
url http://www.adv-geosci.net/21/117/2009/adgeo-21-117-2009.pdf
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