TY - JOUR
T1 - Implications of Lateral Groundwater Flow Across Varying Spatial Resolutions in Global Land Surface Modeling
AU - Akhter, Tanjila
AU - Pokhrel, Yadu
AU - Felfelani, Farshid
AU - Ducharne, Agnès
AU - Lo, Min Hui
AU - Reinecke, Robert
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025. The Author(s).
PY - 2025/7
Y1 - 2025/7
N2 - Accurate groundwater representation in land surface models (LSMs) is vital for water and energy cycle studies, water resource assessments, and climate projections. Yet, many LSMs do not consider key processes including lateral groundwater flow and aquifer pumping, especially at the global scale. This study simulates these processes using an enhanced version of the Community Land Model (CLM5) and evaluates their roles at three spatial resolutions (0.5°, 0.25°, 0.1°). Results show that lateral flow strongly modulates water table depth and capillary rise at all resolutions. The magnitude of mean lateral flow increases from 25 mm/year at 0.5° to 36 mm/year at 0.25°, and 52 mm/year at 0.1° resolution, with pumping inducing lateral flow even at 0.5° (∼50 km), a typical grid size in global LSMs. Further, lateral flow alters runoff in regions with high recharge and shallow water table (e.g., eastern North America and Amazon basin), and soil moisture and ET in regions with comparatively low recharge and deeper water table (e.g., western North America, central Asia, and Australia) through enhanced capillary rise. Runoff alteration by lateral flow increases substantially with resolution, from a maximum of 15 mm/month at 0.5° to 20 mm/month and 25 mm/month at 0.25° and 0.1°, respectively; the impact of resolution on soil moisture and ET is less pronounced. While the model does not fully capture deeper water tables—warranting further enhancements—it provides valuable insights on how lateral groundwater flow impacts land surface processes, highlighting the importance of lateral groundwater flow and pumping in global LSMs.
AB - Accurate groundwater representation in land surface models (LSMs) is vital for water and energy cycle studies, water resource assessments, and climate projections. Yet, many LSMs do not consider key processes including lateral groundwater flow and aquifer pumping, especially at the global scale. This study simulates these processes using an enhanced version of the Community Land Model (CLM5) and evaluates their roles at three spatial resolutions (0.5°, 0.25°, 0.1°). Results show that lateral flow strongly modulates water table depth and capillary rise at all resolutions. The magnitude of mean lateral flow increases from 25 mm/year at 0.5° to 36 mm/year at 0.25°, and 52 mm/year at 0.1° resolution, with pumping inducing lateral flow even at 0.5° (∼50 km), a typical grid size in global LSMs. Further, lateral flow alters runoff in regions with high recharge and shallow water table (e.g., eastern North America and Amazon basin), and soil moisture and ET in regions with comparatively low recharge and deeper water table (e.g., western North America, central Asia, and Australia) through enhanced capillary rise. Runoff alteration by lateral flow increases substantially with resolution, from a maximum of 15 mm/month at 0.5° to 20 mm/month and 25 mm/month at 0.25° and 0.1°, respectively; the impact of resolution on soil moisture and ET is less pronounced. While the model does not fully capture deeper water tables—warranting further enhancements—it provides valuable insights on how lateral groundwater flow impacts land surface processes, highlighting the importance of lateral groundwater flow and pumping in global LSMs.
KW - cell-to-cell lateral groundwater flow
KW - global scale
KW - land surface modeling
KW - pumping
KW - spatial resolution
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105010909984
U2 - 10.1029/2024WR038523
DO - 10.1029/2024WR038523
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105010909984
SN - 0043-1397
VL - 61
JO - Water Resources Research
JF - Water Resources Research
IS - 7
M1 - e2024WR038523
ER -