Session | |
S.2.7: CRYOSPHERE & HYDROLOGY (cont.)
ID. 95462 | |
Presentations | |
11:00 - 11:45
Oral ID: 149 / S.2.7: 1 Dragon 6 Oral Presentation CRYOSPHERE & HYDROLOGY: 95462 - Inverting mountain meteorology from cryospheric remote sensing and ecohydrological modelling (IMMERSE) Inverting Mountain Meteorology from Cryospheric Remote Sensing and Ecohydrological Modelling (IMMERSE) 1Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands, Netherlands, The; 2Institute for Science and Technology of Austria, Austria; 3Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research WSL, Switzerland; 4Tsinghua University, China; 5Aerospace Information Research Institute (AIR), Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), China This project leverages the ESA and NRSCC opportunity to access satellite observations of Earth’s surface to assess precipitation and temperature biases in climate reanalyses, and, building on our previous project (ID 59199), to quantify blue runoff), green (evapotranspiration), and white (sublimation) water fluxes in high elevation catchments. We are applying the land surface models Tethys & Chloris (T&C), validated by independent observations, to deepen our understanding of the cryosphere and water cycle of key water towers in High Mountain Asia (HMA). The T&C model allows us to bridge the disciplinary gaps between snow, permafrost, and glaciers, which generate the runoff that ultimately feeds major rivers, and to consider downstream vegetation, which buffers, delays or amplifies that runoff. Our main aim is to use Earth Observation data to constrain glacio- and eco-hydrological processes, in order to quantify the interplay of blue, green, and white water fluxes in glacierized catchments across High Mountain Asia. The focus of remote sensing data analysis is the observation and understanding of the relation between climate forcing through the surface energy balance of snow and ice and the cryosphere dynamics in terms of both mass and dynamics of snowpack and glaciers. The validated T&C model can assess how ecosystems and vegetation enhances or reduces glacier contributions to streamflow under climate change in HMA. The glacierized study sites span a range of climatic regimes, with several sites in the Pamir-Karakoram Anomaly domain. In addition to the remote sensing observations, field measurements allow independent evaluation of the model results, where available. |