BioRT-HBV 1.0:流域尺度的生物地球化学反应性输运模型

IF 4.4 2区 地球科学 Q1 METEOROLOGY & ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCES Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems Pub Date : 2024-11-30 DOI:10.1029/2024MS004217
Kayalvizhi Sadayappan, Bryn Stewart, Devon Kerins, Andrew Vierbicher, Wei Zhi, Valerie Diana Smykalov, Yuning Shi, Marc Vis, Jan Seibert, Li Li
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引用次数: 0

摘要

反应输运模型(RTMs)是理解和预测陆地和河流生态水文和生物地球化学交织过程的重要工具。传统的RTMs主要关注地下过程,而最近的流域尺度RTMs将地表和地下之间的生态水文和生物地球化学相互作用结合起来。这些新兴的、流域尺度的rtm通常在空间上是明确的,需要大量的数据、计算能力和计算专业知识。然而,迫切需要创建需要最少数据的精简模型,并使具有有限计算背景的科学家能够访问。为此,我们开发了BioRT-HBV 1.0,这是一个流域尺度的水文生物地球化学RTM,它建立在广泛使用的桶型HBV模型之上,以其简单和最小的数据要求而闻名。BioRT-HBV使用HBV的概念结构和水文输出来模拟包括平流溶质运输和依赖于反应热力学和动力学的生物地球化学反应在内的过程。这些反应包括化学风化、土壤呼吸和养分转化。该模型使用天气时间序列(气温、降水和潜在蒸散量)和地下水、土壤和岩石的初始生物地球化学条件作为输入,输出地下水和河流中反应速率和溶质浓度的时间序列。本文介绍了该模型的结构和控制方程,并通过对某水源集水区碳氮过程的模拟实例说明了该模型的实用性。如示例所示,BioRT-HBV可用于阐明不可见的、难以测量的地下生物地球化学反应的动力学,以及它们对观察到的溪流或河流化学和溶质输出的影响。由于其简洁的结构和易于使用的图形用户界面,对于没有深入计算训练的用户来说,BioRT-HBV可以成为一个有用的研究工具。此外,它还可以作为一种教育工具,促进跨学科思想的传播,培养一个多样化、平等和包容的用户社区。
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BioRT-HBV 1.0: A Biogeochemical Reactive Transport Model at the Watershed Scale

Reactive Transport Models (RTMs) are essential tools for understanding and predicting intertwined ecohydrological and biogeochemical processes on land and in rivers. While traditional RTMs have focused primarily on subsurface processes, recent watershed-scale RTMs have integrated ecohydrological and biogeochemical interactions between surface and subsurface. These emergent, watershed-scale RTMs are often spatially explicit and require extensive data, computational power, and computational expertise. There is however a pressing need to create parsimonious models that require minimal data and are accessible to scientists with limited computational background. To that end, we have developed BioRT-HBV 1.0, a watershed-scale, hydro-biogeochemical RTM that builds upon the widely used, bucket-type HBV model known for its simplicity and minimal data requirements. BioRT-HBV uses the conceptual structure and hydrology output of HBV to simulate processes including advective solute transport and biogeochemical reactions that depend on reaction thermodynamics and kinetics. These reactions include, for example, chemical weathering, soil respiration, and nutrient transformation. The model uses time series of weather (air temperature, precipitation, and potential evapotranspiration) and initial biogeochemical conditions of subsurface water, soils, and rocks as input, and output times series of reaction rates and solute concentrations in subsurface waters and rivers. This paper presents the model structure and governing equations and demonstrates its utility with examples simulating carbon and nitrogen processes in a headwater catchment. As shown in the examples, BioRT-HBV can be used to illuminate the dynamics of biogeochemical reactions in the invisible, arduous-to-measure subsurface, and their influence on the observed stream or river chemistry and solute export. With its parsimonious structure and easy-to-use graphical user interface, BioRT-HBV can be a useful research tool for users without in-depth computational training. It can additionally serve as an educational tool that promotes pollination of ideas across disciplines and foster a diverse, equal, and inclusive user community.

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来源期刊
Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems
Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems METEOROLOGY & ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCES-
CiteScore
11.40
自引率
11.80%
发文量
241
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems (JAMES) is committed to advancing the science of Earth systems modeling by offering high-quality scientific research through online availability and open access licensing. JAMES invites authors and readers from the international Earth systems modeling community. Open access. Articles are available free of charge for everyone with Internet access to view and download. Formal peer review. Supplemental material, such as code samples, images, and visualizations, is published at no additional charge. No additional charge for color figures. Modest page charges to cover production costs. Articles published in high-quality full text PDF, HTML, and XML. Internal and external reference linking, DOI registration, and forward linking via CrossRef.
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