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Read Full Article (file size: 628442 bytes) Cited by
WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH,
VOL. 39, NO. 10,
1278,
doi:10.1029/2002WR001297,
2003
Tight coupling between soil moisture and the surface radiation budget in semiarid environments: Implications for land-atmosphere
interactions
Eric E. Small
Department of Geological Sciences, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado, USA
Shirley A. Kurc
Department of Geological Sciences, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado, USA
Abstract
Observations are used to examine how soil moisture influences the surface radiation budget, ground heat flux, and available
energy in semiarid environments. Defining this relationship is critical to understand interactions between the land surface
and the atmosphere, in particular assessing if a feedback exists between soil moisture and rainfall anomalies. We use two
summers of data collected from semiarid grassland and shrubland ecosystems in central New Mexico. The response of surface
radiation budget components and other variables to soil moisture variations are quantified via linear regression. Then, the
variations are scaled over the observed range of soil moisture (15% volumetric water content). The soil temperature is lower
by >10°C when the surface soil is wet, compared to when the soil is dry. This temperature decrease results in a measured decrease
of 85–100 W m−2 in longwave radiation emitted at the surface. The increase in net longwave radiation is equal in magnitude because downward
longwave radiation does not vary with soil moisture. The observed changes in net shortwave radiation are relatively minor
(<10 W m−2), as the surface albedo decreases by only 1.5% when soil is wet. Net radiation increases by an amount roughly equal to the
decrease in emitted longwave radiation (∼85–100 W m−2). Changes in ground heat flux are not detectable, given the noise in the data. Therefore the available energy, Q
a
, is higher by 80 W m−2 when the soil is wet. This change is 22% of average Q
a
at the shrubland site and 19% at the grassland site. The observed soil moisture-induced Q
a
variations are large compared to other sources of Q
a
variability, so they should influence boundary layer moist static energy. However, the intervals during which soil moisture
is high and therefore Rn and Q
a
are enhanced are short, on the order of several days. Therefore feedbacks to rainfall may be limited. Compared to other environments,
the influence of soil moisture on Rn and Q
a
is likely greater in semiarid environments because soil moisture-induced fluctuations in evaporative fraction and surface
temperature are relatively large.
Received 11
March
2002;
accepted 20
June
2003;
published 4
October
2003.
Index Terms: 1818 Hydrology: Evapotranspiration; 1833 Hydrology: Hydroclimatology; 1866 Hydrology: Soil moisture; 3322 Meteorology and Atmospheric Dynamics: Land/atmosphere interactions.
Read Full Article (file size: 628442 bytes) Cited by
Citation: Small, E. E., and S. A. Kurc
(2003),
Tight coupling between soil moisture and the surface radiation budget in semiarid environments: Implications for land-atmosphere
interactions,
Water Resour. Res.,
39(10),
1278,
doi:10.1029/2002WR001297.
Copyright 2003 by the American Geophysical Union.
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