Weather, Climate and Ecosystems · ESPM 111 Ecosystem Ecology Weather, Climate and Ecosystems:...

Preview:

Citation preview

ESPM 111 Ecosystem Ecology

Weather, Climate and Ecosystems

Dennis BaldocchiUniversity of California, Berkeley

6/3/2014

ESPM 111 Ecosystem Ecology

ESPM 111 Ecosystem Ecology

Weather, Climate and Ecosystems: Outline

• Concepts– Atmospheric Meteors and Composition– ‘Greenhouse-Effect’ Principles– Seasons– Global and Regional Circulation

• Climate– Climate Forcing and Variability– Global Temperature, Precipitation and Radiation

Maps

ESPM 111 Ecosystem Ecology

Weather and Climate Meteors

• Electromagnetic Radiation– Solar (shortwave) and Terrestrial (longwave)– f(season, clouds)

• Temperature– Air, soil, vegetation

• Wind Velocity and Direction• Moisture

– Gaseous: vapor pressure, Relative Humidity, dew point– Liquid: Rain, dew, clouds– Solid: snow, sleet, frost, hail, rime, clouds

• Pressure

Many Ecological Processes are a Function of, or Correlate with, Climate and Weather

• Photosynthesis = f(sunlight, temperature, humidity, rainfall)

• Evaporation = f(sunlight, temperature, humidity, rainfall)• Respiration = f(temperature, rainfall)• Decomposition =f(temperature, rainfall)• Ecosystem Structure and Function = f(sunlight,

temperature, rainfall)• Soil Formation and Nutrition= f(temperature, rainfall)

ESPM 111 Ecosystem Ecology

Weather vs Climate• Weather is the Recent Condition of the

Atmosphere, yesterday, today, tomorrow– Weather is Chaotic, can Exhibit Extreme Behavior

• Climate is the Average Condition of the Atmosphere over long-time durations, e.g. 30 years, Century, Millennium– Climate is relatively stable, e.g. summers are hot,

winters are cold

ESPM 111 Ecosystem Ecology

ESPM 111 Ecosystem Ecology

Weather/Climate Concepts• Atmosphere is a Dynamic and Complex System

– Multiple Positive and Negative Feedbacks that operate across a Spectrum of Time and Space Scales

– Non-Linear Processes– Sensitivity to Initial Conditions– Experiences Strange Attractors, so is Phase Space is

Constrained– Thresholds and Tipping Points– Coherent Features Emerge, like Hurricanes and Tornadoes

ESPM 111 Ecosystem Ecology

Warm and Dry in the West

Cold and Snowy in the East

ESPM 111 Ecosystem Ecology

Berkeley

Day-Year

1980.0 1980.2 1980.4 1980.6 1980.8

Tem

pera

ture

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

Day to Day Variation in Mean Temperature

ESPM 111 Ecosystem Ecology

ESPM 111 Ecosystem Ecology

Chemistry and Physics of the Atmosphere

ESPM 111 Ecosystem Ecology

Atmospheric Composition

• Nitrogen– 78.084%

• Oxygen– 20.946%

• Argon– 0.934%

• Carbon Dioxide– 0.0395%

• Water Vapor– 0.1 to 4%

• Trace Gases– Nitrous Oxide, CO, Methane, Ozone, VOCs

ESPM 111 Ecosystem Ecology

Partial Pressure Law• Total Pressure is the sum of the

partial pressures of its components– P=pn2+po2+par+ph2o+pco2+…

• P at sea level, 101.3 kPa

• P equal mass of overhead atmosphere time acceleration due to gravity, per unit area

AP M g

ESPM 111 Ecosystem Ecology

Atmospheric Temperature Profile

ESPM 111 Ecosystem Ecology

Planetary Boundary Layer

ESPM 111 Ecosystem Ecology

Solar Constant

• 1366 J m-2 s-1 or W m-2

• Amount of Energy Available to Drive Work by the Climate System and Life

ESPM 111 Ecosystem Ecology

Comparison between Planck’s Law for Sun and Earth

Planck's Law

Wavelength, microns

1e-8 1e-7 1e-6 1e-5 1e-4 1e-3

Ene

rgy

(T,

)

1e+3

1e+4

1e+5

1e+6

1e+7

1e+8

1e+9

1e+10

1e+11

1e+12

1e+13

1e+14

1e+15

Earth, T = 298 KSun, T = 5800 K

ESPM 111 Ecosystem Ecology

Wavelength (microns)

1 10 100

Abso

rptio

n C

ross

-Sec

tion

(cm

-1/(m

olec

ule

cm-2

)

1e-21

1e-20

1e-19

1e-18

1e-17

H2O CO2

HI-Tran Database

Many Atmospheric Trace Gases Absorb & Re-emit Infrared Radiation

ESPM 111 Ecosystem Ecology

www.GlobalwarmingArt.com

ESPM 111 Ecosystem Ecologywww.GlobalwarmingArt.com

ESPM 111 Ecosystem Ecology

Trenberth et al 2009 BAMS

ESPM 111 Ecosystem Ecology

Basic Earth/Sun Geometry

ESPM 111 Ecosystem Ecology

Lapse Rates, Temperature Decreases with Height

• Dry Adiabatic Lapse Rate– 9.8 C km-1

• Moist Adiabatic Lapse Rate– 6 C km-1

Change in Internal Energy Equals Change in Work Done on the Air Parcel

ESPM 111 Ecosystem Ecology

Hei

ght,

m

zT

unstablethermal

stratifiation

Hei

ght,

m

stablethermal

stratification

zTH

eigh

t,m

near neutralstability

zT

Tparcel > TairTparcel < Tair

Concepts of Thermal Stratification

Temperature

ESPM 111 Ecosystem Ecology

Adiabatic Lapse Rate, Lifted Condensation Level and Clouds

http://www.sci.uidaho.edu/scripter/geog100/lect/05-atmos-water-wx

ESPM 111 Ecosystem Ecology

Orographic PrecipitationAir Lifted by a Mountain, Cools, Can

Condense, Form Clouds and Rain/Snow

http://www.sci.uidaho.edu/scripter/geog100/lect/05-atmos-water-wx

ESPM 111 Ecosystem Ecology

Succession of Weather Fronts off the Pacific Coast of North AmericaRole of High and Low Pressure Zones on Weather

ESPM 111 Ecosystem Ecology

http://www.worsleyschool.net/science/files/aboutweather/coldfront.gif

Cold and Warm Fronts and RainTwo Ways to Lift Parcels of Air, Form Clouds and Rain

ESPM 111 Ecosystem Ecology

LOW

High

Cyclonic CirculationAir is Convergent

Anti-Cyclonic Circulation:Air is Divergent

High and Low Pressure Systems in Northern Hemisphere

ESPM 111 Ecosystem Ecology

Convergence:Air Rises, Temperature Decreases,Vapor Condenses, Clouds Form,Rain Possible

LOW

ESPM 111 Ecosystem Ecology

Divergence:Air Sinks, Temperature WarmsCloud Formation is Suppressed

High

ESPM 111 Ecosystem Ecology

Large Scale Patterns Dominating Weather in California

Aleutian Low Steer Storm Tracks during Winter

North Pacific High Block Storms duringSummer

http://www.pacificstormsclimatology.org/index.php?page=regional-overview

ESPM 111 Ecosystem Ecology

Differential Solar heating causes Air to rises at equator and subsided at poles

This is superimposed upon the Earth’s rotation and the Coriolis Force which determineswind direction

Circulation cells help explain global distribution of rainfall

From Chapin

ESPM 111 Ecosystem Ecology

La Nina

ESPM 111 Ecosystem Ecology

El Nino

http://weatherevents.co.uk/widespread-flooding-in-australia-and-the-affect-of-la-nina/

ESPM 111 Ecosystem Ecology

Climate Distribution

ESPM 111 Ecosystem EcologyIPCC dataset

ESPM 111 Ecosystem EcologyIPCC dataset

ESPM 111 Ecosystem Ecology

ESPM 111 Ecosystem Ecology

Summary• Solar Energy Drives Weather and Climate• Trace Gases that absorb and re-radiate energy

warm the atmosphere and Earth’s surface above its radiative equilibrium value

• Differential heating of the Earth and its Rotation causes circulation of the air

• Different declination, relative to the Sun, causes the seasons.

• Rising air parcels, by fronts, topography or instability, can cool, condense, form clouds and rain

ESPM 111 Ecosystem Ecology

Zachos et al Science 2002

Natural Solar Forcing of Climate Variability Over Geological Time

ESPM 111 Ecosystem Ecology

Source Rob Rohde, http://www.globalwarmingart.com/images/7/7e/Milankovitch_Variations.png

Natural Forcing of the Climate System, last Million Years

Recommended