Authors
Andrew J Pitman, Nathalie de Noblet‐Ducoudré, FT Cruz, Edouard Léopold Davin, GB Bonan, V Brovkin, M Claussen, C Delire, L Ganzeveld, V Gayler, BJJM Van Den Hurk, PJ Lawrence, MK Van Der Molen, C Müller, CH Reick, SI Seneviratne, BJ Strengers, A Voldoire
Publication date
2009/7
Journal
Geophysical Research Letters
Volume
36
Issue
14
Description
Seven climate models were used to explore the biogeophysical impacts of human‐induced land cover change (LCC) at regional and global scales. The imposed LCC led to statistically significant decreases in the northern hemisphere summer latent heat flux in three models, and increases in three models. Five models simulated statistically significant cooling in summer in near‐surface temperature over regions of LCC and one simulated warming. There were few significant changes in precipitation. Our results show no common remote impacts of LCC. The lack of consistency among the seven models was due to: 1) the implementation of LCC despite agreed maps of agricultural land, 2) the representation of crop phenology, 3) the parameterisation of albedo, and 4) the representation of evapotranspiration for different land cover types. This study highlights a dilemma: LCC is regionally significant, but it is not feasible …
Total citations
2009201020112012201320142015201620172018201920202021202220232024229354048465736423131292645365
Scholar articles