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Mistral and Tramontane are wind systems in southern France and the western Mediterranean Sea. Both are caused by similar synoptic situations and channeled in valleys. Their relevance for the climate of the western Mediterranean region motivated this work. The representation of Mistral and Tramontane in regional climate simulations was surveyed with the models ALADIN, WRF, PROMES, COSMO-CLM, RegCM, and LMDZ. ERA-Interim and global CMIP5 simulations (MPI-ESM, CMCC-CM, HadGEM2-ES, and CNRM-CM5) provided the lateral boundary data for the regional simulations regarding the 20th century and two representative concentration pathways for the 21st century (RCP4.5 and RCP8.5).
A Mistral and Tramontane time series, a principal component analysis of pressure fields, and a Bayesian network were combined to develop a classification algorithm to identify pressure patterns in favor of Mistral and Tramontane. The regional climate models were able to reproduce the observed climatology of Mistral and Tramontane. Compared to observational data (SAFRAN and QuikSCAT), the simulations underestimate the wind speed over the Mediterranean Sea, mainly at the borders of the main flow. Simulations with smaller grid spacing showed better agreement with the observations.
A sensitivity study tested the influence of the Charnock parameter on the Mistral wind field. Its value impacted both wind speed and wind direction. Decreasing the orographic resolution in idealized simulations using COSMO-CLM caused a reduction in wind speed and a broader flow area. Including a parameterization for subgrid scale orography improved the simulation. However, an accurate simulation of Mistral and Tramontane still requires a high-resolution orography.
The classification algorithm also was applied to pressure fields from regional climate simulations driven by global simulation data. At the end of the 21st century, only small, non-significant changes in the number of Mistral days per year occur in the projection simulations. The number of Tramontane days per year decreased significantly.
Floodplains and other wetlands depend on seasonal river flooding and play an important role in the terrestrial water cycle. They influence evapotranspiration, water storage and river discharge dynamics, and they are the habitat of a large number of animals and plants. Thus, to assess the Earth’s system and its changes, a robust understanding of the dynamics of floodplain wetlands including inundated areas, water storages, and water flows is required.
This PhD thesis aims at improving the modeling of large floodplains and wetlands within the global-scale hydrological model WaterGAP, in order to better estimate water flows and water storage variations in different storage compartments. Within the scope of this thesis, I have developed a new approach to simulate dynamic floodplain inundation on a global-scale. This approach introduces an algorithm into WaterGAP, which has a spatial resolution of 0.5 degree (longitude and latitude) globally. The new approach uses subgrid-scale topography, based on high-resolution digital elevation models, to describe the floodplain elevation profile within each grid cell by applying a hypsographic curve. The approach comprises the modeling of a two-way river-floodplain interaction, the separate downstream water transport within the river and the floodplain – both with temporally and spatially different variable flow velocities – and the floodplain-groundwater interactions. The WaterGAP version that includes the floodplain algorithm, WaterGAP 2.2b_fpl, estimates floodplain and river water storage, inundated area and water table elevation, and also simulates backwater effects.
WaterGAP 2.2b_fpl was applied to model river discharge, river flow velocity, water storages, water heights and surface water extent on a global-scale. Model results were comprehensively validated against ground observations and remote sensing data. Overall, the modeled and observed data are in agreement. In comparison to the former version WaterGAP 2.2b, the model performance has improved significantly. The improvements are most remarkable in the Amazon River basin. However, the seasonal variation of surface water extent and total water storage anomalies are still too low in many regions on the globe when compared to observations. A detailed analysis of the simulated results suggests that in the Amazon River basin the introduction of backwater effects is important for realistically simulating water storages and surface water extent. Future efforts should focus on the simulation of water levels in order to better model the flow routing according to water slope. To further improve the model performance in specific regions, I recommend that the globally constant model parameters that affect inundation initiation, river-floodplain interaction, DEM correction for vegetation, and backwater amount at basin or subbasin-scale be adjusted.