Abstract

The ISLSCP Workshop was held in Columbia, Maryland, 23–26 June 1992 with over 240 scientists and science managers attending. The goal was to assess the progress of the last decade in the areas of modeling, satellite data algorithm development, and field experiments. This article includes: 1. 1. A review of the state and direction of biosphere-atmosphere model development and an assessment of the data needs of the models. Models covering a large range of timescales were considered: energy-water-carbon (seconds to seasons); carbon cycles and biogeochemistry (days to years); and ecological structure and function (years to millennia). 2. 2. A reference to current satellite data algorithms and other global data sources. The areas covered in the workshop were: near-surface meteorology, surface radiation budget, precipitation, runoff, snow and ice, soils and soil moisture, and land cover type and land cover attributes. These are discussed in detail in other articles in this issue. 3. 3. A review of completed and planned major field experiments. The major experiments of the last decade are summarized and the lessons noted. The participating scientists agreed on the need to rapidly assemble and circulate global data sets of variables and parameters required to initialize, force, and validate the global biosphere-atmosphere models. A prioritized list of data sets required to meet this need is set out and discussed. Lastly, initiatives taken by ISLSCP to satisfy these requirements are reviewed: Initiative I. Immediate Generation of High Priority Global Data Sets Some essential global data sets are to be put together within 2 years and released to the community by mid-1994. These data sets will be mapped to a common spatial resolution (1° × 1°) and will cover the period 1987–1988. 1. 1. Vegetation: Global sets of vegetation-related parameters are to be generated with a monthly time resolution. Available AVHRR data sets are to be used as the basis for this effort, and algorithms will be applied to calculate fields of cover type, phenology, FPAR, and leaf area index. These fields can then in turn be used to infer other surface parameters such as roughness, albedo, biomass, etc. 2. 2. Hydrometeorology: Global meteorological fields retrieved from numerical reanalysis will be manipulated to provide near-surface forcing data sets for temperature, humidity, windspeed, etc. Observations of precipitation, runoff, and snow cover are to be worked up into easily accessible forms. 3. 3. Radiation Budget: A closer interface with the International Satellite Cloud Climatology Project (ISCCP) and related projects will be pursued to obtain surface radiation budget components at higher spatial resolutions, as well as fields of incident PAR. 4. 4. Soils: A small project was set in place with the goal of providing a useful soil type and properties data set for use by global modelers. Initiative II: Improved, Follow-on Data Sets The data sets specified in Initiative I are to be generated within a 2-year period. However, it is clear that great improvements could be made over this first data release which must rely on preexisting data sets and robust, available algorithms. Work was started to scope out what needs to be done to produce improved versions of all the Initiative I data sets within 5 years, by mid-1997. Initiative III: Improved Communications within the Land Science Community Future discussions within ISLSCP and between ISLSCP and other bodies will focus on the need to coordinate different research thrusts within the land science community, particularly the modeling, algorithm and field experiment work.

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