Abstract

Urmia Lake in the northwest Iran has undergone significant desiccation in recent decades, shrinking to a much smaller size than its original. This study implements the WRF-Lake coupled modeling system to examine the impacts of the observed physical changes over the Lake during a heavy snowfall event occurred February 1–2, 2017. Modifications are introduced to represent the shrunken, salt-encrusted lake surface and surrounding arid environment through updating land use, soil characteristics, lake size and depth, and albedo data. Experiments incorporating lake-atmosphere coupling and land surface refinements (Lake_CTL, Lake_LULC, Lake_AL) outperform simulations without a lake (WRF_noLake) in reproducing observed precipitation patterns at stations surrounding the Urmia Lake. All simulations underestimate the extreme 290 mm snowfall recorded at the Urmia station; however, the Lake_LULC and Lake_AL improve snowfall representation at other stations around the lake. Regarding snow cover validation, Lake_LULC and Lake_AL exhibit a higher correlation with satellite observations and show a significant improvement in snow detection near Urmia Lake. They have a Probability of Detection (POD) of 0.94 and a Critical Success Index (CSI) of 0.91, compared to a POD of 0.79–0.80 and a CSIs of ∼0.77 for the default lake model (Lake_CTL) and the WRF_noLake experiments, respectively. Additionally, adjusting the initial lake surface temperature to match observations substantially reduces cold biases in near-surface air temperatures over Urmia Lake. The lack of lake temperature updating in WRF-Lake poses ongoing challenges in the model, though. In summary, this study demonstrates that refining the representations of desiccated lakes and their surroundings in high-resolution coupled models would improve simulations of meteorological processes influenced by lake-atmosphere interactions.

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