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Featured researches published by F. Voss.


Journal of Hydrometeorology | 2011

Multimodel estimate of the global terrestrial water balance: setup and first results

Ingjerd Haddeland; Douglas B. Clark; Wietse Franssen; F. Ludwig; F. Voss; Nigel W. Arnell; N. Bertrand; M. J. Best; Sonja S. Folwell; Dieter Gerten; S. M. Gomes; Simon N. Gosling; Stefan Hagemann; Naota Hanasaki; Richard Harding; Jens Heinke; P. Kabat; Sujan Koirala; Taikan Oki; Jan Polcher; Tobias Stacke; Pedro Viterbo; Graham P. Weedon; Pat J.-F. Yeh

Six land surface models and five global hydrological models participate in a model intercomparison project [Water Model Intercomparison Project (WaterMIP)], which for the first time compares simulation results of these different classes of models in a consistent way. In this paper, the simulation setup is described and aspects of the multimodel global terrestrial water balance are presented. All models were run at 0.58 spatial resolution for the global land areas for a 15-yr period (1985–99) using a newly developed global meteorological dataset. Simulated global terrestrial evapotranspiration, excluding Greenland and Antarctica, ranges from 415 to 586 mm yr 21 (from 60 000 to 85 000 km 3 yr 21 ), and simulated runoff ranges from 290 to 457 mm yr 21 (from 42 000 to 66 000 km 3 yr 21 ). Both the mean and median runoff fractions for the land surface models are lower than those of the global hydrological models, although the range is wider. Significant simulation differences between land surface and global hydrological models are found to be caused by the snow scheme employed. The physically based energy balance approach used by land surface models generally results in lower snow water equivalent values than the conceptual degreeday approach used by global hydrological models. Some differences in simulated runoff and evapotranspiration are explained by model parameterizations, although the processes included and parameterizations used are not distinct to either land surface models or global hydrological models. The results show that differences between models are a major source of uncertainty. Climate change impact studies thus need to use not only multiple climate models but also some other measure of uncertainty (e.g., multiple impact


Journal of Hydrometeorology | 2011

How Well Do Large-Scale Models Reproduce Regional Hydrological Extremes in Europe?

Christel Prudhomme; Simon Parry; Jamie Hannaford; Douglas B. Clark; Stefan Hagemann; F. Voss

AbstractThis paper presents a new methodology for assessing the ability of gridded hydrological models to reproduce large-scale hydrological high and low flow events (as a proxy for hydrological extremes) as described by catalogues of historical droughts [using the regional deficiency index (RDI)] and high flows [regional flood index (RFI)] previously derived from river flow measurements across Europe. Using the same methods, total runoff simulated by three global hydrological models from the Water Model Intercomparison Project (WaterMIP) [Joint U.K. Land Environment Simulator (JULES), Water Global Assessment and Prognosis (WaterGAP), and Max Planck Institute Hydrological Model (MPI-HM)] run with the same meteorological input (watch forcing data) at the same spatial 0.5° grid was used to calculate simulated RDI and RFI for the period 1963–2001 in the same European regions, directly comparable with the observed catalogues. Observed and simulated RDI and RFI time series were compared using three performance...


Journal of Hydrometeorology | 2013

Global Multimodel Analysis of Drought in Runoff for the Second Half of the Twentieth Century

M.H.J. van Huijgevoort; P. Hazenberg; H.A.J. van Lanen; A. J. Teuling; Douglas B. Clark; Sonja S. Folwell; Simon N. Gosling; Naota Hanasaki; Jens Heinke; Sujan Koirala; Tobias Stacke; F. Voss; Justin Sheffield; R. Uijlenhoet

During the past decades large-scale models have been developed to simulate global and continental terrestrial water cycles. It is an open question whether these models are suitable to capture hydrological drought, in terms of runoff, on a global scale. A multimodel ensemble analysis was carried outtoevaluate if 10 such large-scale models agree on major drought events during the second half of the twentieth century. Time series of monthly precipitation, monthly total runofffrom 10 global hydrological models, and their ensemble median have been used to identify drought. Temporal development of area in drought for various regions across the globe was investigated. Model spread was largest in regions with low runoff and smallest in regions with high runoff. In vast regions, correlation between runoff drought derived from the models and meteorological drought was found to be low. This indicated that models add information to the signal derived from precipitation and that runoff drought cannot directly be determined from precipitation data alone in global drought analyses with a constant aggregation period. However, duration and spatial extent of major drought events differed between models. Some models showed a fast runoff response to rainfall, which led to deviations from reported drought events in slowly responding hydrological systems. By using an ensemble of models, this fast runoff response was partly overcome and delay in drought propagating from meteorological drought to drought in runoff was included. Finally, an ensemble of models also allows for consideration of uncertainty associated with individual model structures.


Earth System Dynamics Discussions | 2012

Climate change impact on available water resources obtained using multiple global climate and hydrology models

Stefan Hagemann; Cui Chen; Douglas B. Clark; Sonja S. Folwell; Simon N. Gosling; Ingjerd Haddeland; Naota Hanasaki; Jens Heinke; F. Ludwig; F. Voss; Andy Wiltshire


Archive | 2011

Drought at the global scale in the 21st Century

G. Corzo Perez; H.A.J. van Lanen; N. Bertrand; Cui Chen; Douglas B. Clark; Sonja S. Folwell; Simon N. Gosling; Naota Hanasaki; Jens Heinke; F. Voss


PLOS ONE | 2011

Drought at the global scale in the 2nd part of the 20th century (1963-2001)

M.H.J. van Huijgevoort; P. Hazenberg; H.A.J. van Lanen; N. Bertrand; Douglas B. Clark; Sonja S. Folwell; Simon N. Gosling; Naota Hanasaki; Jens Heinke; Tobias Stacke; F. Voss


Journal of Dairy Science | 2011

Projected hydrological changes in the 21st century and related uncertainties obtained from a multi-model ensemble

Cui Chen; Stefan Hagemann; Douglas B. Clark; Sonja S. Folwell; Simon N. Gosling; Ingjerd Haddeland; Naota Hanasaki; Jens Heinke; F. Ludwig; F. Voss; Andy Wiltshire


Archive | 2011

Improvements in hydrological processes in general hydrological models and land surface models within WATCH

Jan Polcher; N. Bertrand; Hester Biemans; Douglas B. Clark; Marina Floerke; Nicola Gedney; Dieter Gerten; Tobias Stacke; Michelle van Vliet; F. Voss


Geophysical Research Abstracts | 2011

Effects of climate model radiation and humidity estimates on hydrological impact assessments

Ingjerd Haddeland; F. Ludwig; Cui Chen; F. Voss


Archive | 2010

Multi-model estimate of the historic and future global water balance: A model intercomparison using multiple global hydrological models and multiple climate models

F. Ludwig; Ingjerd Haddeland; Douglas B. Clark; F. Voss; M.T.H. van Vliet; S. Hagemann; P. Kabat

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Jens Heinke

Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research

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Ingjerd Haddeland

Norwegian Water Resources and Energy Directorate

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F. Ludwig

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Cui Chen

Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research - UFZ

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H.A.J. van Lanen

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Dieter Gerten

Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research

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