Abstract
Abstract Land-surface schemes developed for incorporation into global climate models include parameterizations that are not yet fully validated and depend upon the specification of a large (20–50) number of ecological and soil parameters, the values of which are not yet well known. There are two methods of investigating the sensitivity of a land-surface scheme to prescribed values: simple one-at-a-time changes or factorial experiments. Factorial experiments offer information about interactions between parameters and are thus a more powerful tool. Here the results of a suite of factorial experiments are reported. These are designed (i) to illustrate the usefulness of this methodology and (ii) to identify factors important to the performance of complex land-surface schemes. The Biosphere-Atmosphere Transfer Scheme (BATS) is used and its sensitivity is considered (a) to prescribed ecological and soil parameters and (b) to atmospheric forcing used in the off-line tests undertaken. Results indicate that the mo...
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CITATION STYLE
Henderson-Sellers, A. (1993). A Factorial Assessment of the Sensitivity of the BATS Land-Surface Parameterization Scheme. Journal of Climate, 6(2), 227–247. https://doi.org/10.1175/1520-0442(1993)006<0227:afaots>2.0.co;2
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