Uncertainty in projected critical soil moisture values in CMIP6 affects
the interpretation of a more moisture-limited world
Abstract
Evaporation is controlled by soil moisture (SM) availability when
conditions are not extremely wet. In such a moisture-limited regime,
land-atmosphere coupling is active, and a chain of linked processes
allow land surface anomalies to affect weather and climate. How
frequently any location is in a moisture-limited regime largely
determines the intensity of land feedbacks on climate. Conventionally
this has been quantified by shifting probability distributions of SM,
but the boundary between moisture-limited and energy-limited regimes,
called the critical soil moisture (CSM) value, can also change. CSM is
an emergent property of the land-atmosphere system, determined by the
balance of radiative, thermal and kinetic energy factors. We propose a
novel framework to separate the contributions of these separate effects
on the likelihood that SM lies in the moisture-limited regime. We
confirm that global warming leads to a more moisture-limited world. This
is attributed to reduced SM in most regions: the moisture effect. CSM
changes mainly due to shifts in the surface energy budget, significantly
affecting 27% of the globe in analyzed climate change simulations.
However, consistency among Earth system models regarding CSM change is
low. The poor agreement hints that variability of CSM in models and the
factors that determine CSM are not well represented. The fidelity of CSM
in Earth system models has been overlooked as a factor in water cycle
projections. Careful assessment of CSM in nature and for model
development should be a priority, with potential benefits for multiple
research fields including meteorology, hydrology, and ecology.