Atmospheric Environment 42 (2008) 4185–4197 Sensitivity of biogenic emissions simulated by a land-surface model to land-cover representations Lindsey E. Gulden à , Zong-Liang Yang à , Guo-Yue Niu Department of Geological Sciences, The John A. and Katherine G. Jackson School of Geosciences, The University of Texas at Austin, 1 University Station #C1100, Austin, Texas 78712-0254, USA Received 15 May 2007; received in revised form 11 January 2008; accepted 11 January 2008 Abstract We evaluate the sensitivity of biogenic emissions simulated by a land-surface model (LSM) to different representations of land-cover vegetation. We drive the community land model on a 0.11 grid over Texas, USA, from 1993 to 1998 using bilinearly interpolated North American Regional Reanalysis data. Two land-cover datasets provide the starting point for analysis: (1) a satellite-derived vegetation and soil-color database and (2) a vegetation-distribution dataset derived from ground surveys. These datasets help us to qualitatively characterize the uncertainty in land-cover representations. We systematically vary the datasets to examine the sensitivity of modeled emissions to variation in representation of bare-soil fraction, vegetation-type distribution, and phenology. Different datasets’ representation of vegetation-type distribution leads to simulated mean statewide total biogenic emissions that vary by a factor of 3. Variation in specified bare-soil fraction causes simulated statewide average emissions that vary by a factor of 1.7. Scaling leaf area index values within reasonable bounds causes a near-linear change in simulated emissions. Differences in simulated values are the largest for major metropolitan regions and for eastern and central Texas, where biogenic emissions are the highest and where tropospheric ozone pollution is a significant concern. Changing bare-soil fraction alters simulated vegetation temperature and consequently indirectly affects modeled emissions (p16% of inherent emissions capacity). Our estimates of the model sensitivity to land-cover representation are consistent with those for other regions. r 2008 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. Keywords: Biogenic emissions; Sensitivity analysis; Land-surface model; Air quality; Land-cover dataset; Vegetation; BVOCs; Isoprene; Monoterpene 1. Introduction Realistic simulation of biogenic emissions is a shared goal of climate scientists, the environmental engineering community, and air-quality policy- makers. Biogenic volatile organic compounds (BVOCs) were first recognized as a key contributor to the formation of photochemical smog and were subsequently identified as actors in diverse climatic processes. In addition to their role in the production of tropospheric ozone, BVOCs condense to form secondary organic aerosols, which alter Earth’s radiative balance (Kavouras et al., 1998; Claeys et al., 2004, Kroll et al., 2006) and serve as cloud ARTICLE IN PRESS www.elsevier.com/locate/atmosenv 1352-2310/$ - see front matter r 2008 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. doi:10.1016/j.atmosenv.2008.01.045 à Corresponding authors. Tel.: +1 512 471 3824. E-mail addresses: gulden@mail.utexas.edu (L.E. Gulden), liang@mail.utexas.edu (Z.-L. Yang).