Evaluation of air-soil temperature relationships simulated by land surface models during winter across the permafrost region

A realistic simulation of snow cover and its thermal properties are important for accurate modelling of permafrost. We analyse simulated relationships between air and near-surface (20 cm) soil temperatures in the Northern Hemisphere permafrost region during winter, with a particular focus on snow insulation effects in nine land surface models, and compare them with observations from 268 Russian stations. There are large cross-model differences in the simulated differences between near-surface soil and air temperatures (ΔT; 3 to 14 °C), in the sensitivity of soil-to-air temperature (0.13 to 0.96 °C °C⁻¹), and in the relationship between ΔT and snow depth. The observed relationship between ΔT and snow depth can be used as a metric to evaluate the effects of each model's representation of snow insulation, hence guide improvements to the model's conceptual structure and process parameterisations. Models with better performance apply multilayer snow schemes and consider complex snow processes. Some models show poor performance in representing snow insulation due to underestimation of snow depth and/or overestimation of snow conductivity. Generally, models identified as most acceptable with respect to snow insulation simulate reasonable areas of near-surface permafrost (13.19 to 15.77 million km²). However, there is not a simple relationship between the sophistication of the snow insulation in the acceptable models and the simulated area of Northern Hemisphere near-surface permafrost, because several other factors, such as soil depth used in the models, the treatment of soil organic matter content, hydrology and vegetation cover, also affect the simulated permafrost distribution.

To Access Resource:

Questions? Email Resource Support Contact:

  • opensky@ucar.edu
    UCAR/NCAR - Library

Resource Type publication
Temporal Range Begin N/A
Temporal Range End N/A
Temporal Resolution N/A
Bounding Box North Lat N/A
Bounding Box South Lat N/A
Bounding Box West Long N/A
Bounding Box East Long N/A
Spatial Representation N/A
Spatial Resolution N/A
Related Links N/A
Additional Information N/A
Resource Format PDF
Standardized Resource Format PDF
Asset Size N/A
Legal Constraints

Copyright 2016 Authors. This work is distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.


Access Constraints None
Software Implementation Language N/A

Resource Support Name N/A
Resource Support Email opensky@ucar.edu
Resource Support Organization UCAR/NCAR - Library
Distributor N/A
Metadata Contact Name N/A
Metadata Contact Email opensky@ucar.edu
Metadata Contact Organization UCAR/NCAR - Library

Author Wang, W.
Rinke, A.
Moore, J.
Ji, D.
Cui, X.
Peng, S.
Lawrence, David M.
McGuire, A.
Burke, E.
Chen, X.
Decharme, B.
Koven, C.
MacDougall, A.
Saito, K.
Zhang, W.
Alkama, R.
Bohn, T.
Ciais, P.
Delire, C.
Gouttevin, I.
Hajima, T.
Krinner, G.
Lettenmaier, D.
Miller, P.
Smith, B.
Sueyoshi, T.
Sherstiukov, A.
Publisher UCAR/NCAR - Library
Publication Date 2016-08-11T00:00:00
Digital Object Identifier (DOI) Not Assigned
Alternate Identifier N/A
Resource Version N/A
Topic Category geoscientificInformation
Progress N/A
Metadata Date 2025-07-11T20:46:15.573739
Metadata Record Identifier edu.ucar.opensky::articles:18695
Metadata Language eng; USA
Suggested Citation Wang, W., Rinke, A., Moore, J., Ji, D., Cui, X., Peng, S., Lawrence, David M., McGuire, A., Burke, E., Chen, X., Decharme, B., Koven, C., MacDougall, A., Saito, K., Zhang, W., Alkama, R., Bohn, T., Ciais, P., Delire, C., Gouttevin, I., Hajima, T., Krinner, G., Lettenmaier, D., Miller, P., Smith, B., Sueyoshi, T., Sherstiukov, A.. (2016). Evaluation of air-soil temperature relationships simulated by land surface models during winter across the permafrost region. UCAR/NCAR - Library. https://n2t.org/ark:/85065/d7zw1nkn. Accessed 30 July 2025.

Harvest Source