Abstract Modification of grasslands into irrigated and nonirrigated agriculture in the Great Plains resulted in significant impacts on weather and climate. However, there has been lack of observational data–based studies solely focused on impacts of irrigation on the PBL and convective conditions. The Great Plains Irrigation Experiment (GRAINEX), conducted during the 2018 growing season, collected data over irrigated and nonirrigated land uses over Nebraska to understand these impacts. Specifically, the objective was to determine whether the impacts of irrigation are sustained throughout the growing season. The data analyzed include latent and sensible heat flux, air temperature, dewpoint temperature, equivalent temperature (moist enthalpy), PBL height, lifting condensation level (LCL), level of free convection (LFC), and PBL mixing ratio. Results show increased partitioning of energy into latent heat relative to sensible heat over irrigated areas while average maximum air temperature was decreased and dewpoint temperature was increased from the early to peak growing season. Radiosonde data suggest reduced planetary boundary layer (PBL) heights at all launch sites from the early to peak growing season. However, reduction of PBL height was much greater over irrigated areas than over nonirrigated croplands. Relative to the early growing period, LCL and LFC heights were also lower during the peak growing period over irrigated areas. Results note, for the first time, that the impacts of irrigation on PBL evolution and convective environment can be sustained throughout the growing season and regardless of background atmospheric conditions. These are important findings and applicable to other irrigated areas in the world. Significance StatementTo meet the ever-increasing demand for food, many regions of the world have adopted widespread irrigation. The High Plains Aquifer (HPA) region, located within the Great Plains of the United States, is one of the most extensively irrigated regions. In this study, for the first time, we have conducted a detailed irrigation-focused land surface and atmospheric data collection campaign to determine irrigation impacts on the atmosphere. This research demonstrates that irrigation significantly alters lower atmospheric characteristics and creates favorable cloud and convection development conditions during the growing season. The results clearly show first-order impacts of irrigation on regional weather and climate and hence warrant further attention so that we can minimize negative impacts and achieve sustainable irrigation.
more »
« less
Land-Atmosphere Interactions during GRAINEX: Planetary Boundary Layer Evolution in the Presence of Irrigation
Abstract This paper analyzed observations from the Great Plains Irrigation Experiment (GRAINEX) to better understand L-A interactions and PBL evolution. This study is focused on a day when the largest forcing on the boundary layer originated from the land surface/land use. To examine these impacts, we also applied the Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) model. Results from the observations show that compared to non-irrigated areas, air temperature, wind speed, and PBL height were lower while dew point temperature and latent heat flux were higher over irrigated areas. Findings suggest that entrainment layer drying and differences in energy partitioning over irrigated and non-irrigated areas played an important role in PBL evolution. In the final hours of the day, the PBL collapsed faster over non-irrigated areas compared to irrigated. The WRF model simulations agree with these observations. They also show that the extent of irrigation (expressed as irrigation fraction or IF) in an area impacts L-A response. Under ∼60% IF, the latent heat flux and mixing ratio reach their highest value while temperature and PBLH are at their lowest, and sensible heat flux is near its lowest value. Results are reversed for ∼2% IF. It is concluded that irrigation notably impacts L-A interactions and PBL evolution.
more »
« less
- PAR ID:
- 10384856
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Journal of Hydrometeorology
- ISSN:
- 1525-755X
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
More Like this
-
-
null (Ed.)Abstract Extensive expansion in irrigated agriculture has taken place over the last half century. Due to increased irrigation and resultant land-use–land-cover change, the central United States has seen a decrease in temperature and changes in precipitation during the second half of the twentieth century. To investigate the impacts of widespread commencement of irrigation at the beginning of the growing season and continued irrigation throughout the summer on local and regional weather, the Great Plains Irrigation Experiment (GRAINEX) was conducted in the spring and summer of 2018 in southeastern Nebraska. GRAINEX consisted of two 15-day intensive observation periods. Observational platforms from multiple agencies and universities were deployed to investigate the role of irrigation in surface moisture content, heat fluxes, diurnal boundary layer evolution, and local precipitation. This article provides an overview of the data collected and an analysis of the role of irrigation in land–atmosphere interactions on time scales from the seasonal to the diurnal. The analysis shows that a clear irrigation signal was apparent during the peak growing season in mid-July. This paper shows the strong impact of irrigation on surface fluxes, near-surface temperature and humidity, and boundary layer growth and decay.more » « less
-
The atmospheric boundary layer along the coastal-urban transect differs from that of urban or rural regions due to the distinctive interaction between the sea breeze and the urban heat island effect. In this manuscript, we present the observations of the atmospheric boundary layer in the Houston, Texas, area during the Coastal Urban Boundary Layer Experiment (CUBE) from June through September 2022. In order to understand the unique characteristics of the coastal urban boundary layer, we collected mean and turbulence data from micrometeorological towers and ground-based remote sensing instruments installed in the urban, coastal, bay, and rural sections within the greater Houston region. Furthermore, an urbanized weather research and forecast (WRF) model incorporating the Building Effect Parameterization and Building Energy Model (BEP-BEM) scheme is used to recognize the spatial variability of the meteorological conditions in the Houston Metro area. Compared to non-urban sites, the urban site exhibits a higher near-surface temperature throughout the day, with the highest temperature difference occurring at night due to the redistribution of the stored heat as sensible heat. During the dry period in June, we observed comparatively higher sensible heat flux in the urban site, demonstrating the heat island effect and lower latent heat flux due to lack of vegetation. The urban site had higher TKE values throughout the day than other sites because of the uneven roughness of the landscape. One of the unique findings of this study is the shift in spectral characteristics along the coastal-rural-urban transect. The power and co-spectra of zonal and vertical velocities and the vertical heat flux during the convective periods varied significantly across all the sites. The coastal site was influenced mainly by the local bay breeze shifting the peak to higher frequencies. The boundary layer height in the urban site was generally greater than in bay and rural sites due to increased convection in urban areas resulting from anthropogenic modification of land cover and waste heat from air conditioning use. The balance between the urban thermal and mechanical roughness effects was seen during the sea breeze front (SBF) event on the highest heat index day as SBF was triggered and accelerated by UHI.more » « less
-
Abstract In order to understand the impact of irrigation on weather and climate, the 2018 Great Plains Irrigation Experiment collected comprehensive observations straddling irrigated and non‐irrigated regions in southeast Nebraska. Using these observations, we examine how irrigation affects diurnal terrain‐generated slope circulations, specifically the slope wind. We find that irrigation applied to upslope regions of gently sloping terrain reduces terrain‐induced baroclinicity and the associated pressure gradient force by up to two‐thirds. This leads to the reduction in the afternoon and evening upslope wind and is supported through comparisons to the High‐Resolution Rapid Refresh operational model, which does not explicitly account for irrigation. Additionally, the presence of irrigation decreases daytime sensible heat flux (Bowen ratio reduced 40% compared to non‐irrigated regions), weakening turbulent transport of momentum. Modifications to the terrain‐forced circulation by irrigation has the potential to affect moisture transport and thus cloud and precipitation formation over the Great Plains.more » « less
-
Abstract Correctly calculating the timing and amount of crop irrigation is crucial for capturing irrigation effects on surface water and energy budgets and land‐atmosphere interactions. This study incorporated a dynamic irrigation scheme into the Noah with multiparameterization land surface model and investigated three methods of determining crop growing season length by agriculture management data. The irrigation scheme was assessed at field scales using observations from two contrasting (irrigated and rainfed) AmeriFlux sites near Mead, Nebraska. Results show that crop‐specific growing‐season length helped capture the first application timing and total irrigation amount, especially for soybeans. With a calibrated soil‐moisture triggering threshold (IRR_CRI), using planting and harvesting dates alone could reasonably predict the first application for maize. For soybeans, additional constraints on growing season were required to correct an early bias in the first modeled application. Realistic leaf area index input was essential for identifying the leaf area index‐based growing season. When transitioning from field to regional scales, the county‐level calibrated IRR_CRI helped mitigate overestimated (underestimated) total irrigation amount in southeastern Nebraska (lower Mississippi River Basin). In these two heavily irrigated regions, irrigation produced a cooling effect of 0.8–1.4 K, a moistening effect of 1.2–2.4 g/kg, a reduction in sensible heat flux by 60–105 W/m2, and an increase in latent heat flux by 75–120 W/m2. Most of irrigation water was used to increase soil moisture and evaporation, rather than runoff. Lacking regional‐scale irrigation timing and crop‐specific parameters makes transferring the evaluation and parameter‐constraint methods from field to regional scales difficult.more » « less
An official website of the United States government

