Contribution of the coupled atmosphere-ocean-sea ice-vegetation model COSMOS to the PlioMIP2

被引:37
|
作者
Stepanek, Christian [1 ]
Samakinwa, Eric [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Knorr, Gregor [1 ]
Lohmann, Gerrit [1 ,4 ]
机构
[1] Helmholtz Ctr Polar & Marine Res, Alfred Wegener Inst, Bremerhaven, Germany
[2] Univ Bern, Inst Geog, Bern, Switzerland
[3] Univ Bern, Oeschger Ctr Climate Change Res, Bern, Switzerland
[4] Univ Bremen, Inst Environm Phys, Bremen, Germany
关键词
MID-PLIOCENE CLIMATE; EXPERIMENTAL-DESIGN; PMIP4; CONTRIBUTION; CIRCULATION; SHEET; SENSITIVITY; SYSTEM; WATER; PARAMETERIZATION; PARAMETRIZATION;
D O I
10.5194/cp-16-2275-2020
中图分类号
P [天文学、地球科学];
学科分类号
07 ;
摘要
We present the Alfred Wegener Institute's contribution to the Pliocene Model Intercomparison Project Phase 2 (PlioMIP2) wherein we employ the Community Earth System Models (COSMOS) that include a dynamic vegetation scheme. This work builds on our contribution to Phase 1 of the Pliocene Model Intercomparison Project (PlioMIP1) wherein we employed the same model without dynamic vegetation. Our input to the PlioMIP2 special issue of Climate of the Past is twofold. In an accompanying paper we compare results derived with COSMOS in the framework of PlioMIP2 and PlioMIP1. With this paper we present details of our contribution with COSMOS to PlioMIP2. We provide a description of the model and of methods employed to transfer reconstructed mid-Pliocene geography, as provided by the Pliocene Reconstruction and Synoptic Mapping Initiative Phase 4 (PRISM4), to model boundary conditions. We describe the spin-up procedure for creating the COSMOS PlioMIP2 simulation ensemble and present large-scale climate patterns of the COSMOS PlioMIP2 mid-Pliocene core simulation. Furthermore, we quantify the contribution of individual components of PRISM4 boundary conditions to characteristics of simulated mid-Pliocene climate and discuss implications for anthropogenic warming. When exposed to PRISM4 boundary conditions, COSMOS provides insight into a mid-Pliocene climate that is characterised by increased rainfall (+0.17 mm d(-1)) and elevated surface temperature (+3.37 degrees C) in comparison to the pre-industrial (PI). About two-thirds of the mid-Pliocene core temperature anomaly can be directly attributed to carbon dioxide that is elevated with respect to PI. The contribution of topography and ice sheets to mid-Pliocene warmth is much smaller in contrast - about one-quarter and one-eighth, respectively, and nonlinearities are negligible. The simulated mid-Pliocene climate comprises pronounced polar amplification, a reduced meridional temperature gradient, a northwards-shifted tropical rain belt, an Arctic Ocean that is nearly free of sea ice during boreal summer, and muted seasonality at Northern Hemisphere high latitudes. Simulated mid-Pliocene precipitation patterns are defined by both carbon dioxide and PRISM4 paleogeography. Our COSMOS simulations confirm long-standing characteristics of the mid-Pliocene Earth system, among these increased meridional volume transport in the Atlantic Ocean, an extended and intensified equatorial warm pool, and pronounced poleward expansion of vegetation cover. By means of a comparison of our results to a reconstruction of the sea surface temperature (SST) of the mid-Pliocene we find that COSMOS reproduces reconstructed SST best if exposed to a carbon dioxide concentration of 400 ppmv. In the Atlantic to Arctic Ocean the simulated mid-Pliocene core climate state is too cold in comparison to the SST reconstruction. The discord can be mitigated to some extent by increasing carbon dioxide that causes increased mismatch between the model and reconstruction in other regions.
引用
收藏
页码:2275 / 2323
页数:49
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Sensitivity of open-water ice growth and ice concentration evolution in a coupled atmosphere-ocean-sea ice model
    Shi, Xiaoxu
    Lohmann, Gerrit
    DYNAMICS OF ATMOSPHERES AND OCEANS, 2017, 79 : 10 - 30
  • [2] Regionally coupled atmosphere-ocean-sea ice-marine biogeochemistry model ROM: 1. Description and validation
    Sein, Dmitry V.
    Mikolajewicz, Uwe
    Groger, Matthias
    Fast, Irina
    Cabos, William
    Pinto, Joaquim G.
    Hagemann, Stefan
    Semmler, Tido
    Izquierdo, Alfredo
    Jacob, Daniela
    JOURNAL OF ADVANCES IN MODELING EARTH SYSTEMS, 2015, 7 (01) : 268 - 304
  • [3] Future sea-level projections with a coupled atmosphere-ocean-ice-sheet model
    Park, Jun-Young
    Schloesser, Fabian
    Timmermann, Axel
    Choudhury, Dipayan
    Lee, June-Yi
    Nellikkattil, Arjun Babu
    NATURE COMMUNICATIONS, 2023, 14 (01)
  • [4] An Overview of Antarctic Sea Ice in the Community Earth System Model Version 2, Part I: Analysis of the Seasonal Cycle in the Context of Sea Ice Thermodynamics and Coupled Atmosphere-Ocean-Ice Processes
    Singh, Hansi K. A.
    Landrum, Laura
    Holland, Marika M.
    Bailey, David A.
    DuVivier, Alice K.
    JOURNAL OF ADVANCES IN MODELING EARTH SYSTEMS, 2021, 13 (03)
  • [5] Holocene North Atlantic Overturning in an atmosphere-ocean-sea ice model compared to proxy-based reconstructions
    Blaschek, M.
    Renssen, H.
    Kissel, C.
    Thornalley, D.
    PALEOCEANOGRAPHY, 2015, 30 (11): : 1503 - 1524
  • [6] Understanding the influence of ocean waves on Arctic sea ice simulation: a modeling study with an atmosphere-ocean-wave-sea ice coupled model
    Yang, Chao-Yuan
    Liu, Jiping
    Chen, Dake
    CRYOSPHERE, 2024, 18 (03) : 1215 - 1239
  • [7] Response of a Coupled Ocean-Atmosphere Model to Greenland Ice Melting
    Stammer, D.
    Agarwal, N.
    Herrmann, P.
    Koehl, A.
    Mechoso, C. R.
    SURVEYS IN GEOPHYSICS, 2011, 32 (4-5) : 621 - 642
  • [8] Biases of the Arctic climate in a regional ocean-sea ice-atmosphere coupled model: an annual validation
    Liu Xiying
    ACTA OCEANOLOGICA SINICA, 2014, 33 (09) : 56 - 67
  • [9] Quantifying predictability of sea ice around the Indian Antarctic stations using coupled ocean sea ice model with shelf ice
    Kumar, Anurag
    Dwivedi, Suneet
    Pandey, Avinash C.
    POLAR SCIENCE, 2018, 18 : 83 - 93
  • [10] Evaluation of the Sea-Ice Simulation in the Upgraded Version of the Coupled Regional Atmosphere-Ocean- Sea Ice Model HIRHAM-NAOSIM 2.0
    Dorn, Wolfgang
    Rinke, Annette
    Koeberle, Cornelia
    Dethloff, Klaus
    Gerdes, Ruediger
    ATMOSPHERE, 2019, 10 (08)