Toward understanding parametric controls on runoff sensitivity to climate in the Community Land Model: A case study over the Colorado River headwaters

Crucial to the assessment of future water security is how the land model component of Earth System Models partition precipitation into evapotranspiration and runoff, and the sensitivity of this partitioning to climate. This sensitivity is not explicitly constrained in land models nor the model parameters important for this sensitivity identified. Here, we seek to understand parametric controls on runoff sensitivity to precipitation and temperature in a state‐of‐the‐science land model, the Community Land Model version 5 (CLM5). Process‐parameter interactions underlying these two climate sensitivities are investigated using the sophisticated variance‐based sensitivity analysis. This analysis focuses on three snow‐dominated basins in the Colorado River headwaters region, a prominent exemplar where land models display a wide disparity in runoff sensitivities. Runoff sensitivities are dominated by indirect or interaction effects between a few parameters of subsurface, snow, and plant processes. A focus on only one kind of parameters would therefore limit the ability to constrain the others. Surface runoff exhibits strong sensitivity to parameters of snow and subsurface processes. Constraining snow simulations would require explicit representation of the spatial variability across large elevation gradients. Subsurface runoff and soil evaporation exhibit very similar sensitivities. Model calibration against the subsurface runoff flux would therefore constrain soil evaporation. The push toward a mechanistic treatment of processes in CLM5 have dampened the sensitivity of parameters compared to earlier model versions. A focus on the sensitive parameters and processes identified here can help characterize and reduce uncertainty in water resource sensitivity to climate change.

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Related Links

Related Dataset #1 : Daily 4 km Gridded SWE and Snow Depth from Assimilated In-Situ and Modeled Data over the Conterminous US, Version 1

Related Dataset #2 : Daily snow water equivalent (SWE) observations from 1,065 stations in western North America for years 1960 - 2019.

Related Other #1 : IMS Daily Northern Hemisphere Snow and Ice Analysis at 1 km, 4 km, and 24 km Resolutions, Version 1

Related Software #1 : aelkouk/runoff_climate_sensitivity_analysis: v2.0

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Author Elkouk, A.
Pokhrel, Y.
Livneh, B.
Payton, E.
Luo, L.
Cheng, Yifan
Dagon, Katherine
Swenson, Sean
Wood, Andrew
Lawrence, David M.
Thiery, W.
Publisher UCAR/NCAR - Library
Publication Date 2024-12-01T00:00:00
Digital Object Identifier (DOI) Not Assigned
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Topic Category geoscientificInformation
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Metadata Date 2025-07-10T19:56:47.075459
Metadata Record Identifier edu.ucar.opensky::articles:42330
Metadata Language eng; USA
Suggested Citation Elkouk, A., Pokhrel, Y., Livneh, B., Payton, E., Luo, L., Cheng, Yifan, Dagon, Katherine, Swenson, Sean, Wood, Andrew, Lawrence, David M., Thiery, W.. (2024). Toward understanding parametric controls on runoff sensitivity to climate in the Community Land Model: A case study over the Colorado River headwaters. UCAR/NCAR - Library. https://n2t.net/ark:/85065/d7rx9hct. Accessed 03 August 2025.

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