Abstract

Abstract. Climate is one of the main drivers for landscape evolution models (LEMs), yet its representation is often basic with values averaged over long time periods and frequently lumped to the same value for the whole basin. Clearly, this hides the heterogeneity of precipitation – but what impact does this averaging have on erosion and deposition, topography, and the final shape of LEM landscapes? This paper presents results from the first systematic investigation into how the spatial and temporal resolution of precipitation affects LEM simulations of sediment yields and patterns of erosion and deposition. This is carried out by assessing the sensitivity of the CAESAR-Lisflood LEM to different spatial and temporal precipitation resolutions – as well as how this interacts with different-size drainage basins over short and long timescales. A range of simulations were carried out, varying rainfall from 0.25 h × 5 km to 24 h × Lump resolution over three different-sized basins for 30-year durations. Results showed that there was a sensitivity to temporal and spatial resolution, with the finest leading to > 100 % increases in basin sediment yields. To look at how these interactions manifested over longer timescales, several simulations were carried out to model a 1000-year period. These showed a systematic bias towards greater erosion in uplands and deposition in valley floors with the finest spatial- and temporal-resolution data. Further tests showed that this effect was due solely to the data resolution, not orographic factors. Additional research indicated that these differences in sediment yield could be accounted for by adding a compensation factor to the model sediment transport law. However, this resulted in notable differences in the topographies generated, especially in third-order and higher streams. The implications of these findings are that uncalibrated past and present LEMs using lumped and time-averaged climate inputs may be under-predicting basin sediment yields as well as introducing spatial biases through under-predicting erosion in first-order streams but over-predicting erosion in second- and third-order streams and valley floor areas. Calibrated LEMs may give correct sediment yields, but patterns of erosion and deposition will be different and the calibration may not be correct for changing climates. This may have significant impacts on the modelled basin profile and shape from long-timescale simulations.

Highlights

  • Landscape evolution models (LEMs) have been extensively developed to understand how Earth surface processes influence drainage basin dynamics and morphology

  • The relative comparisons showed that the change in resolution influences the performance statistics for the hydrology with Table 7 showing an improvement in performance (RMSE and Nash–Sutcliffe) with finer temporal resolution, with only very small improvements due to finer spatial resolutions (RMSE only)

  • Our findings show that simulated basin sediment yields and spatial patterns of erosion and deposition are sensitive to the spatial and temporal resolutions of precipitation data used to drive models

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Summary

Introduction

Landscape evolution models (LEMs) have been extensively developed to understand how Earth surface processes influence drainage basin dynamics and morphology. One of the important forcings of erosion and morphodynamic change in these models is climate – usually in the form of precipitation. All LEMs use some degree of spatial and temporal averaging for their driving climate or precipitation data. Rainfall (or climate parameters) are usually lumped over the whole basin and changed together. This clearly removes the effects of spatial heterogeneity in the rainfall that may be caused by atmospheric factors (i.e. convective vs frontal) or due to topography (orographic effects). There is always some form of averaging, whether decadal, annual, daily or hourly, that conceals heterogeneity in the precipitation input.

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