4.7 Article

Grid-based simulation of soil moisture in the UK: future changes in extremes and wetting and drying dates

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH LETTERS
Volume 17, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1748-9326/ac7a4e

Keywords

climate change; hydrological impacts; rainfall-runoff; soil moisture; UK Climate Projections 2018; UKCP18

Funding

  1. NERC [NE/R016429/1]

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This study simulates soil moisture content in the UK using a hydrological model and compares the results with observation-based data. It finds good correspondence in soil drying and wetting dates and the month when soils are driest. The study also uses regional projections to investigate future changes in soil moisture, showing an increase in low soil moisture levels and later soil wetting dates.
Soil moisture, typically defined as the amount of water in the unsaturated soil layer, is a central component of the hydrological cycle. The potential impacts of climate change on soil moisture have been less specifically studied than those on river flows, despite soil moisture deficits/excesses being a factor in a range of natural hazards, as well as having obvious importance for agriculture. Here, 1 km grids of monthly mean soil moisture content are simulated using a national-scale grid-based hydrological model, more typically applied to look at changes in river flows across Britain. A comparison of the soil moisture estimates from an observation-based simulation, with soil moisture deficit data from an operational system developed by the UK Met Office (Meteorological Office Rainfall and Evaporation Calculation System; MORECS), shows relatively good correspondence in soil drying and wetting dates, and in the month when soils are driest. The UK Climate Projections 2018 Regional projections are then used to drive the hydrological model, to investigate changes in occurrence of indicative soil moisture extremes and changes in typical wetting and drying dates of soils across the country. Analyses comparing baseline (December 1981-November 2011) and future (December 2050-November 2080) time-slices suggest large increases in the spatial occurrence of low soil moisture levels, along with later soil wetting dates, although changes to soil drying dates are less clear. Such information on potential future changes in soil moisture is important to enable the development of appropriate adaptation strategies for a range of sectors vulnerable to soil moisture levels.

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