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Dryad

Community Land Model synthetic meteorology simulation model output

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Nov 12, 2025 version files 239.13 MB

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Abstract

Terrestrial processes such as photosynthesis and the movement of water through soils can influence climate from local to global scales by controlling land-to-atmosphere fluxes of water, energy, and carbon. Terrestrial processes are also influenced by climate, as demonstrated by the large body of research exploring how the terrestrial water and carbon cycles respond to climate change. Biogeophysical land-atmosphere feedbacks can therefore potentially modulate changes in land surface water and carbon fluxes. However, the influence of land-atmosphere feedbacks on terrestrial processes has been underexplored. Most previous studies evaluate the biogeophysical impact of land surface changes either in a land only context (i.e., not accounting for land-atmosphere feedbacks at all) or in a fully coupled context (i.e., quantifying the net change in land fluxes without the ability to attribute how much of the response is from feedbacks). While some coupled studies invoke land-atmosphere feedbacks as important drivers of the net coupled land surface changes, it is rare for coupled modeling studies to unambiguously disentangle the extent to which (or mechanisms through which) land-atmosphere feedbacks contribute to the net coupled land response. In isolation, neither coupled nor land-only simulations alone are able to directly disentangle the influence of land-atmosphere feedbacks on the overall coupled change in land water and carbon fluxes. We ran idealized model experiments in the Community Land Model version 5 (CLM5) that can be used to disentangle the atmosphere-to-land branch of the overall land-atmosphere feedback.