Integrated land surface-groundwater models are valuable tools in simulating the terrestrial
hydrologic cycle as a continuous system and exploring the extent of land surface-subsurface interactions
from catchment to regional scales. However, the fidelity of model simulations is impacted not only by the
vegetation and subsurface parameterizations, but also by the antecedent condition of model state variables,
such as the initial soil moisture, depth to groundwater, and ground temperature. In land surface modeling, a
given model is often run repeatedly over a single year of forcing data until it reaches an equilibrium state: the
point at which there is minimal artificial drift in the model state or prognostic variables (most often the soil
moisture). For more complex coupled and integrated systems, where there is an increased computational
cost of simulation and the number of variables sensitive to initialization is greater than in traditional
uncoupled land surface modeling schemes, the challenge is to minimize the impact of initialization while
using the smallest spin-up time possible. In this study, multicriteria analysis was performed to assess the spin-
up behavior of the ParFlow.CLM integrated groundwater-surface water-land surface model over a 208 km 2
subcatchment of the Ringkobing Fjord catchment in Denmark. Various measures of spin-up performance
were computed for model state variables such as the soil moisture and groundwater storage, as well as for
diagnostic variables such as the latent and sensible heat fluxes. The impacts of initial conditions on surface
water-groundwater interactions were then explored. Our analysis illustrates that the determination of an equi-
librium state depends strongly on the variable and performance measure used. Choosing an improper initiali-
zation of the model can generate simulations that lead to a misinterpretation of land surface-subsurface
feedback processes and result in large biases in simulated discharge. Estimated spin-up time from a series of
spin-up functions revealed that 20 (or 21) years of simulation were sufficient for the catchment to equilibrate
according to at least one criterion at the 0.1% (0.01%) threshold level. Amongst a range of convergence met-
rics examined, percentage changes in monthly values of groundwater and unsaturated zone storages pro-
duced a slow system convergence to equilibrium, whereas criteria based on ground temperature allowed a
more rapid spin-up. Slow convergence of unsaturated and saturated zone storages is a result of the dynamic
adjustment of the water table in response to a physically arbitrary or inconsistent initialization of a spatially
uniform water table. Achieving equilibrium in subsurface storage ensured equilibrium across a spectrum of
other variables, hence providing a good measure of system-wide equilibrium. Overall, results highlight the
importance of correctly identifying the key variable affecting model equilibrium and also the need to use a
multicriteria approach to achieve a rapid and stable model spin-up.
Key Figure
Figure 11. Annual changes in (a–c)and unsaturated zone storage criteria.AJAMI ET AL.
groundwater and (d–f) unsaturated zone storages (in m) for three equilibrium states based on groundwater storage, root zone storage and discharge,
(g–i) Differences in mean annual DTWT of corresponding simulations from simulation 20.
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Last updated 29 November 2013