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Dive into the research topics where A. J. Pitman is active.

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Featured researches published by A. J. Pitman.


Journal of Hydrometeorology | 2006

GLACE: The Global Land–Atmosphere Coupling Experiment. Part I: Overview

Randal D. Koster; Y. C. Sud; Zhichang Guo; Paul A. Dirmeyer; Gordon B. Bonan; Keith W. Oleson; Edmond Chan; Diana Verseghy; Peter M. Cox; Harvey Davies; Eva Kowalczyk; C. T. Gordon; Shinjiro Kanae; David M. Lawrence; Ping Liu; David Mocko; Cheng-Hsuan Lu; K. L. Mitchell; Sergey Malyshev; B. J. McAvaney; Taikan Oki; Tomohito J. Yamada; A. J. Pitman; Christopher M. Taylor; Ratko Vasic; Yongkang Xue

Abstract The Global Land–Atmosphere Coupling Experiment (GLACE) is a model intercomparison study focusing on a typically neglected yet critical element of numerical weather and climate modeling: land–atmosphere coupling strength, or the degree to which anomalies in land surface state (e.g., soil moisture) can affect rainfall generation and other atmospheric processes. The 12 AGCM groups participating in GLACE performed a series of simple numerical experiments that allow the objective quantification of this element for boreal summer. The derived coupling strengths vary widely. Some similarity, however, is found in the spatial patterns generated by the models, with enough similarity to pinpoint multimodel “hot spots” of land–atmosphere coupling. For boreal summer, such hot spots for precipitation and temperature are found over large regions of Africa, central North America, and India; a hot spot for temperature is also found over eastern China. The design of the GLACE simulations are described in full detai...


Journal of Geophysical Research | 1993

Tropical deforestation: Modeling local- to regional-scale climate change

A. Henderson-Sellers; Robert E. Dickinson; T. B. Durbidge; P. J. Kennedy; K. McGuffie; A. J. Pitman

A tropical deforestation experiment has been conducted in which the tropical moist forest throughout the Amazon Basin and SE Asia has been replaced by scrub grassland in a version of the National Center for Atmospheric Research Community Climate Model (Version 1), which also incorporates a mixed layer ocean and the Biosphere-Atmosphere Transfer Scheme. In both regions we find a smaller temperature increase than did all other previous experiments except that of Henderson-Sellers and Gornitz (1984); indeed, temperatures decrease in some months. On the other hand, we find larger runoff decreases and a larger difference between the changes in evaporation and precipitation than all earlier experiments indicating a basin-wide decrease in moisture convergence. Disturbances in South America extend beyond the region of land-surface change causing temperature reductions and precipitation increases to the south of the deforested Amazon. Changes to the surface climate in the deforested area take between 1 to 2 years to become fully established although the root zone soil moisture is still decreasing in year 3 and the variability of soil moisture and total cloud amount continue increasing throughout the 6-year integration. Besides temperature and precipitation, other fields show statistically significant alterations, especially evaporation and net surface radiation (both decreased).


Journal of Climate | 2007

Evaluation of the AR4 Climate Models’ Simulated Daily Maximum Temperature, Minimum Temperature, and Precipitation over Australia Using Probability Density Functions

S. E. Perkins; A. J. Pitman; Neil J. Holbrook; John McAneney

Abstract The coupled climate models used in the Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change are evaluated. The evaluation is focused on 12 regions of Australia for the daily simulation of precipitation, minimum temperature, and maximum temperature. The evaluation is based on probability density functions and a simple quantitative measure of how well each climate model can capture the observed probability density functions for each variable and each region is introduced. Across all three variables, the coupled climate models perform better than expected. Precipitation is simulated reasonably by most and very well by a small number of models, although the problem with excessive drizzle is apparent in most models. Averaged over Australia, 3 of the 14 climate models capture more than 80% of the observed probability density functions for precipitation. Minimum temperature is simulated well, with 10 of the 13 climate models capturing more than 80% of the observed probability densit...


Journal of Climate | 1997

Cabauw Experimental Results from the Project for Intercomparison of Land-Surface Parameterization Schemes

T. H. C Hen; A. Henderson-Sellers; P. C. D. Milly; A. J. Pitman; A. C. M. Beljaars; Jan Polcher; Aaron Boone; Sam Chang; F. C Hen; C. E. Desborough; Robert E. Dickinson; Michael B. Ek; J. R. Garratt; N. Gedney; Jinwon Kim; Randal D. Koster; Eva Kowalczyk; K. Laval; J. Lean; Dennis P. Lettenmaier; Xu Liang; Kenneth E. Mitchell; Olga N. Nasonova; J. Noilhan; Alan Robock; Cynthia Rosenzweig; John C. Schaake; C. A. Schlosser; Y. S Hao; Andrey B. Shmakin

In the Project for Intercomparison of Land-Surface Parameterization Schemes phase 2a experiment, meteorological data for the year 1987 from Cabauw, the Netherlands, were used as inputs to 23 land-surface flux schemes designed for use in climate and weather models. Schemes were evaluated by comparing their outputs with long-term measurements of surface sensible heat fluxes into the atmosphere and the ground, and of upward longwave radiation and total net radiative fluxes, and also comparing them with latent heat fluxes derived from a surface energy balance. Tuning of schemes by use of the observed flux data was not permitted. On an annual basis, the predicted surface radiative temperature exhibits a range of 2 K across schemes, consistent with the range of about 10 W m22 in predicted surface net radiation. Most modeled values of monthly net radiation differ from the observations by less than the estimated maximum monthly observational error (6 10 Wm 2 2). However, modeled radiative surface temperature appears to have a systematic positive bias in most schemes; this might be explained by an error in assumed emissivity and by models’ neglect of canopy thermal heterogeneity. Annual means of sensible and latent heat fluxes, into which net radiation is partitioned, have ranges across schemes of


Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 1995

The Project for Intercomparison of Land Surface Parameterization Schemes (PILPS): Phases 2 and 3

A. Henderson-Sellers; A. J. Pitman; P. K. Love; P. Irannejad; T. H. Chen

Abstract The World Climate Research Programme Project for Intercomparison of Land Surface Parameterization Schemes (PILPS) is moving into its second and third phases that will exploit observational data and consider the performance of land surface schemes when coupled to their host climate models. The first stage of phase 2 will focus on an attempt to understand the large differences found during phase 1. The first site from which observations will be drawn for phase 2 intercomparisons is Cabauw, the Netherlands (51°58°N, 4°56′E), selected specifically to try to reduce one of the causes of the divergence among the phase 1 results: the initialization of the deep soil moisture. Cabauws deep soil is saturated throughout the year. It also offers a quality controlled set of meteorological forcing and 160 days of flux measurements. PILPS phase 2 follows the form of the phase 1 intercomparisons: simple off-line integrations and comparisons, but in phase 2 participating schemes’ results will be compared against ...


Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2001

Modeling root water uptake in hydrological and climate models

Reinder A. Feddes; Holger Hoff; Michael Bruen; Todd E. Dawson; Patricia de Rosnay; Paul A. Dirmeyer; Robert B. Jackson; P. Kabat; Axel Kleidon; Allan Lilly; A. J. Pitman

Abstract From 30 September to 2 October 1999 a workshop was held in Gif–sur–Yvette, France, with the central objective to develop a research strategy for the next 3–5 years, aiming at a systematic description of root functioning, rooting depth, and root distribution for modeling root water uptake from local and regional to global scales. The goal was to link more closely the weather prediction and climate and hydrological models with ecological and plant physiological information in order to improve the understanding of the impact that root functioning has on the hydrological cycle at various scales. The major outcome of the workshop was a number of recommendations, detailed at the end of this paper, on root water uptake parameterization and modeling and on collection of root and soil hydraulic data.


Journal of Hydrometeorology | 2001

The Representation of Snow in Land Surface Schemes: Results from PILPS 2(d)

A. G. Slater; C. A. Schlosser; C. E. Desborough; A. J. Pitman; A. Henderson-Sellers; Alan Robock; K. Ya; Kenneth E. Mitchell; Aaron Boone; Harald Braden; F. C Hen; P. M. C Ox; P. de Rosnay; Robert E. Dickinson; Qingyun Duan; Jared K. Entin; N. Gedney; Jinwon Kim; V. K Oren; Eva Kowalczyk; Olga N. Nasonova; J. Noilhan; S. Schaake; Andrey B. Shmakin; Diana Verseghy; P. W Etzel; Y. X Ue; Qingcun Zeng

Twenty-one land surface schemes (LSSs) performed simulations forced by 18 yr of observed meteorological data from a grassland catchment at Valdai, Russia, as part of the Project for the Intercomparison of Land-Surface Parameterization Schemes (PILPS) Phase 2(d). In this paper the authors examine the simulation of snow. In comparison with observations, the models are able to capture the broad features of the snow regime on both an intra- and interannual basis. However, weaknesses in the simulations exist, and early season ablation events are a significant source of model scatter. Over the 18-yr simulation, systematic differences between the models’ snow simulations are evident and reveal specific aspects of snow model parameterization and design as being responsible. Vapor exchange at the snow surface varies widely among the models, ranging from a large net loss to a small net source for the snow season. Snow albedo, fractional snow cover, and their interplay have a large effect on energy available for ablation, with differences among models most evident at low snow depths. The incorporation of the snowpack within an LSS structure affects the method by which snow accesses, as well as utilizes, available energy for ablation. The sensitivity of some models to longwave radiation, the dominant winter radiative flux, is partly due to a stability-induced feedback and the differing abilities of models to exchange turbulent energy with the atmosphere. Results presented in this paper suggest where weaknesses in macroscale snow modeling lie and where both theoretical and observational work should be focused to address these weaknesses.


Journal of Climate | 2004

The Rhône-Aggregation Land Surface Scheme Intercomparison Project: An Overview

Aaron Boone; Florence Habets; J. Noilhan; Douglas B. Clark; Paul A. Dirmeyer; S. Fox; Yeugeniy M. Gusev; Ingjerd Haddeland; Randal D. Koster; Dag Lohmann; Sarith P. P. Mahanama; Kenneth E. Mitchell; Olga N. Nasonova; Guo Yue Niu; A. J. Pitman; Jan Polcher; Andrey B. Shmakin; Kenji Tanaka; B. J. J. M. van den Hurk; S. Vérant; Diana Verseghy; Pedro Viterbo; Zong-Liang Yang

The Rhone-Aggregation (Rhone-AGG) Land Surface Scheme (LSS) intercomparison project is an initiative within the Global Energy and Water Cycle Experiment (GEWEX)/Global Land-Atmosphere System Study (GLASS) panel of the World Climate Research Programme (WCRP). It is a intermediate step leading up to the next phase of the Global Soil Wetness Project (GSWP) (Phase 2), for which there will be a broader investigation of the aggregation between global scales (GSWP-1) and the river scale. This project makes use of the Rhone modeling system, which was developed in recent years by the French research community in order to study the continental water cycle on a regional scale. The main goals of this study are to investigate how 15 LSSs simulate the water balance for several annual cycles compared to data from a dense observation network consisting of daily discharge from over 145 gauges and daily snow depth from 24 sites, and to examine the impact of changing the spatial scale on the simulations. The overall evapotranspiration, runoff, and monthly change in water storage are similarly simulated by the LSSs, however, the differing partitioning among the fluxes results in very different river discharges and soil moisture equilibrium states. Subgrid runoff is especially important for discharge at the daily timescale and for smaller-scale basins. Also, models using an explicit treatment of the snowpack compared better with the observations than simpler composite schemes. Results from a series of scaling experiments are examined for which the spatial resolution of the computational grid is decreased to be consistent with large-scale atmospheric models. The impact of upscaling on the domain-averaged hydrological components is similar among most LSSs, with increased evaporation of water intercepted by the canopy and a decrease in surface runoff representing the most consistent inter-LSS responses. A significant finding is that the snow water equivalent is greatly reduced by upscaling in all LSSs but one that explicitly accounts for subgrid-scale orography effects on the atmospheric forcing.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Impacts of climate change on the world's most exceptional ecoregions

Linda J. Beaumont; A. J. Pitman; Sarah E. Perkins; Niklaus E. Zimmermann; Nigel G. Yoccoz; Wilfried Thuiller

The current rate of warming due to increases in greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions is very likely unprecedented over the last 10,000 y. Although the majority of countries have adopted the view that global warming must be limited to <2 °C, current GHG emission rates and nonagreement at Copenhagen in December 2009 increase the likelihood of this limit being exceeded by 2100. Extensive evidence has linked major changes in biological systems to 20th century warming. The “Global 200” comprises 238 ecoregions of exceptional biodiversity [Olson DM, Dinerstein E (2002) Ann Mo Bot Gard 89:199–224]. We assess the likelihood that, by 2070, these iconic ecoregions will regularly experience monthly climatic conditions that were extreme in 1961–1990. Using >600 realizations from climate model ensembles, we show that up to 86% of terrestrial and 83% of freshwater ecoregions will be exposed to average monthly temperature patterns >2 SDs (2σ) of the 1961–1990 baseline, including 82% of critically endangered ecoregions. The entire range of 89 ecoregions will experience extreme monthly temperatures with a local warming of <2 °C. Tropical and subtropical ecoregions, and mangroves, face extreme conditions earliest, some with <1 °C warming. In contrast, few ecoregions within Boreal Forests and Tundra biomes will experience such extremes this century. On average, precipitation regimes do not exceed 2σ of the baseline period, although considerable variability exists across the climate realizations. Further, the strength of the correlation between seasonal temperature and precipitation changes over numerous ecoregions. These results suggest many Global 200 ecoregions may be under substantial climatic stress by 2100.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2004

Impact of land cover change on the climate of southwest Western Australia

A. J. Pitman; G. T. Narisma; Roger A. Pielke; Neil J. Holbrook

[1] A sudden reduction in rainfall occurred in the southwest of Western Australia in the mid-20th century. This reduced inflows to the Perth water supply by about 120 GL (42%) and led to an acceleration of projects to develop new water sources at a cost of about

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Gab Abramowitz

University of New South Wales

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Jason P. Evans

University of New South Wales

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Ying-Ping Wang

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Ruth Lorenz

University of New South Wales

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Markus G. Donat

University of New South Wales

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Mark Decker

University of New South Wales

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