Abstract

Abstract. Increasing atmospheric humidity and convective precipitation over land provide evidence of intensification of the hydrologic cycle – an expected response to surface warming. The extent to which terrestrial ecosystems modulate these hydrologic factors is important to understand feedbacks in the climate system. We measured the oxygen and hydrogen isotope composition of water vapor at a very tall tower (185 m) in the upper Midwest, United States, to diagnose the sources, transport, and fractionation of water vapor in the planetary boundary layer (PBL) over a 3-year period (2010 to 2012). These measurements represent the first set of annual water vapor isotope observations for this region. Several simple isotope models and cross-wavelet analyses were used to assess the importance of the Rayleigh distillation process, evaporation, and PBL entrainment processes on the isotope composition of water vapor. The vapor isotope composition at this tall tower site showed a large seasonal amplitude (mean monthly δ18Ov ranged from −40.2 to −15.9 ‰ and δ2Hv ranged from −278.7 to −113.0 ‰) and followed the familiar Rayleigh distillation relation with water vapor mixing ratio when considering the entire hourly data set. However, this relation was strongly modulated by evaporation and PBL entrainment processes at timescales ranging from hours to several days. The wavelet coherence spectra indicate that the oxygen isotope ratio and the deuterium excess (dv) of water vapor are sensitive to synoptic and PBL processes. According to the phase of the coherence analyses, we show that evaporation often leads changes in dv, confirming that it is a potential tracer of regional evaporation. Isotope mixing models indicate that on average about 31 % of the growing season PBL water vapor is derived from regional evaporation. However, isoforcing calculations and mixing model analyses for high PBL water vapor mixing ratio events ( > 25 mmol mol−1) indicate that regional evaporation can account for 40 to 60 % of the PBL water vapor. These estimates are in relatively good agreement with that derived from numerical weather model simulations. This relatively large fraction of evaporation-derived water vapor implies that evaporation has an important impact on the precipitation recycling ratio within the region. Based on multiple constraints, we estimate that the summer season recycling fraction is about 30 %, indicating a potentially important link with convective precipitation.

Highlights

  • There is unequivocal evidence that the global water cycle has been intensified by anthropogenic warming (Chung et al, 2014; Trenberth et al, 2007a; Santer et al, 2007)

  • A simple two-member isotope mixing model was used to estimate the relative contribution of surface evaporation to the total water vapor concentration of the planetary boundary layer (PBL): fv δv − δb, δE − δb where fv is the fraction of vapor in the PBL derived from regional evaporation, δv is the oxygen isotope composition of the water vapor measured at 185 m, and δb represents the oxygen isotope ratio of the “background” vapor, which can vary depending on synoptic meteorological conditions

  • The theoretical background value was obtained by evaluating the power law relation with water vapor mixing ratio estimated at 700 hPa using reanalysis data provided by the National Centers for Environmental Prediction and the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCEP/NCAR) Reanalysis-2 product

Read more

Summary

Introduction

There is unequivocal evidence that the global water cycle has been intensified by anthropogenic warming (Chung et al, 2014; Trenberth et al, 2007a; Santer et al, 2007). We examine the temporal scales and extent to which Rayleigh distillation (i.e., the removal of water vapor from the air mass via condensation and precipitation), evaporation (including transpiration), and PBL growth processes influence the isotope compositions (δ2Hv, δ18Ov, and dv) of midcontinental atmospheric water vapor as observed in the upper Midwest, United States. We use these tracers to help constrain the precipitation recycling fraction at the tall tower site. Growing season precipitation events are comprised of a significant contribution of regional evaporation and exhibit a relatively high degree of moisture recycling

Study site
Isotope measurements
Wavelet analyses
Numerical modeling
Basic isotope theory
Isotope composition of water vapor in the PBL
Controls on isotope composition of water vapor
Evaporation contribution to PBL vapor and precipitation
Conclusions
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call