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Climate Change UnderGround Cynthia Valle

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Climate Change UnderGround Cynthia Valle OUTLINE What is Climate Change? Where does Groundwater fall? How do GCMs contribute? What are there setbacks? – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Climate Change UnderGround Cynthia Valle


1
Climate Change UnderGroundCynthia Valle
  • OUTLINE
  • What is Climate Change?
  • Where does Groundwater fall?
  • How do GCMs contribute?
  • What are there setbacks?
  • How does regional modeling assist?

2
climate change global warminggreenhouse warming
Svante Arrhenius (1896) was first scientist to
study effect of increased CO2 on surface
Temperatures.
3
GLOBAL CIRCULATION MODELS
  • Formulated to simulate climate sensitivity to
    increased concentrations of greenhouse gases,
    primarily carbon dioxide .

4
GCM Predictions
  • Precipitation by 2080s
  • Increases in Winter Precipitation, 15 to 62
  • Divergence in Summer Precipitation, -36 to 54
  • Precipitation Extremes during late Summer
    through Winter
  • Evaporation by 2080s
  • Increases in Winter by 3 to 9
  • Increases in Summer by 5 to 16
  • Temperature by 2080s
  • Increase of 2-4 degrees Celsius

5
UnEqual Distribution of Climate Changes Effects
  • Areas where precipitation unaffected
  • Increased evapotranspiration
  • Reduced watershed yields.
  • In Tropical Latitudes, mean temperatures will
    remain relatively high and uniform throughout the
    year
  • water resources will not be affected due to the
    assumption of increased hurricane activity.

6
FEEDBACKS
  • GCM predictions based on feedbacks
  • derived from simulations

7
Cloud
  • Global mean net cloud forcing -16 Wm-2
  • Negative Forcing
  • Causing a 10ÂşC to 15ÂşC cooling effect at surface
  • Doubling CO2 to 600 ppm
  • Positive Forcing 4 Wm-2
  • 2ÂşC to 4ÂşC increase in surface temperature
  • Cloud Cover Reduction

8
Surface Albedo
  • Warmer Climates
  • - Melting of Ice
  • - Lower Planetary mean Albedo
  • - Increase in Incoming Solar Radiation
  • - Increase in Surface Temperature.

9
Vegetation
  • Plant Growth and Respiration critically depends
    on atmospheric and land variables
  • CO2 Concentrations, Temperature
  • Soil Moisture
  • Warmer Climates Causes
  • Change in Vegetation
  • Rise in Surface Albedo

10
Ocean-Atmosphere
  • Warmer Climate
  • - Increased Precipitation
  • - Greater Fresh-Sea Water Mixing
  • - Lower Ocean Density
  • - Decreased Ocean Circulation
  • - Decrease in Temperatures
  • at High Latitudes
  • - Decreased Evaporation
  • - Reduced Salinity

(Loaiciga et al, 1995)
11
Soil Moisture
(Loaiciga et al, 1995)
12
GCM Uncertainties
  • Miscomprehension of how systems are coupled
  • Future GHG emissions and conversion to
    atmospheric concentrations
  • Too Simplistic in Parametrization
  • e.g. Cloud Feedback Not address possible
    diurnal/seasonal cloud shifts, changes in
    latitudinal cloud cover, cloud cover shifts from
    albedo variations, changes in cloud optical
    thickness
  • Difference in Measuring Scales of Atmosphere
    (days) and Oceans (up to 1000 yrs)

13
GCM Limitations
  • Predictions can not be confirmed until mid 21st
    century since Climate is so Sensitive and
    Variable
  • Affects are not Distributed Equally
  • Lack of Data
  • Leads to paleoclimatic reconstructions which
    allow for more uncertainity
  • Buttefly Effect
  • Anthropogenic Influences

14
Multi-Scale ModelingRegional Macro
Vorosmarty et al, 2000)
15
CLASP II
  • Uses GCM outputs for watershed scale simulations
  • Nests groundwater models (i.e. MODFLOW) within
    watershed scale system
  • Allows for focus on aquifer-stream interaction in
    physically-based manner
  • Classified as an aquifer-vegetation-atmosphere
    model
  • Distinct from other Models
  • Decadal Timescalecan study impacts of global
    climate change on watersheds
  • Converted to represent Long-Term Groundwater
    Feedbacksappropriate to infer Groundwater
    Implications on Climate Change
  • Done by Studying Change and Interaction between
    Water Table and Latent Heat Fluxes
  • Must be Simplified to get long-term timescale

16
CLASP II Predictions
(York et al, 2001)
17
Compared to Other Simulations
  • (York et al, 2001)
  • Clasp II simulation including an aquifer compared
    to one excluding an aquifer, proves how
    groundwater has an effect on climate change
    and/or vice-a-versa.

18
CLASP II Limitations
  • Characterizes atmosphere as a single column
  • Denies horizontal heterogeneities
  • Abundance of fixed variables
  • Aquifer surface and base elevation, hydraulic
    conductivity, storage coefficient, and soil
    density and heat capacity
  • Hydraulic head is set to be constant
  • Homogeneous vegetation cover
  • Climatic feedbacks may distort hydrological
    systems, in turn altering parametrization
  • Limited to inaccuracies of the larger scale model

19
INDIRECT IMPACTSof Climate Change on Groundwater
  • Melting of Ice Caps causes Sea Level Rise which
    leads to Seawater Intrusions
  • Population Growth
  • Land Use Efficiencies (Urbanization)
  • Deforestation

20
STRESS TODAY
(Ranjan et al, 2006)
21
(Ranjan et al, 2006)
22
CONCLUSION
  • Models having taken a multiple-scale approach by
    nesting a subgrid model within a GCM, allow for
    more realistic insight on how hydrological
    processes are affected as a function of
    climate change.
  • Models also open our eyes to how much we have
    yet to understand about the interactions in
    coupled systems.

23
References
  • Bloomfield, J.P., Williams, R.J., Gooddy, D.C.,
    Cape, J.N., and P. Guha. (2006) Impacts of
    climate change on the fate and behavior of
    pesticides in surface and groundwater- a UK
    perspective. Science of Total Environment 369,
    163-177.
  • Holman, I.P. (2006) Climate change impacts on
    groundwater recharge- uncertainity, shortcomings,
    and the way forward? Hydrogeology Journal 14,
    637-647.
  • Karl, T.R. and Kevin E. Trenberth. (2003) Modern
    climate change. Science 302, 1719-1723.
  • Liang, X. and Zhenghui Xie. (2002) Important
    factors in land-atmosphere interactions surface
    generations and interactions between surface and
    groundwater. Global and Planetary Change 38,
    101-114.
  • Loaiciga, H.A., Valdes, J.B., Vogel, R., Garvey,
    J., and Harry Scwarz. (1995) Global Warming and
    the hydrological cycle. Journal of Hydrology
    174, 83-127.
  • Ranjan, P., Kazama, S., and Masaki Sawamoto.
    (2006) Effects of climate change on coastal fresh
    groundwater resources. Global Environmental
    Change 16, 388-399.
  • Vorosmarty, C.J., Green, P., Salisbury, J., and
    Richard B. Lammers. (2000) Global water
    resources Vulnerability from climate change and
    population growth. Science 289, 284-288.
  • Wilby, R.L., Whitehead, P.G., Wade, A.J.,
    Butterfield, D., Davis, R.J., and G. Watts.
    (2006) Integrated modeling of climate change
    impacts on water resources and quality in lowland
    catchment River Kennet, UK. Journal of
    Hydrology 330, 204-220.
  • York, J.P., Person, M., Gutowski, W.J., and
    Thomas C. Winter. (2001) Putting aquifers into
    atmospheric simulation models an example from
    the Mill Creek Watershed, northeastern Kansas.
    Advances in Water Resources 25, 221-238.

24
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