TY - JOUR
T1 - Recent global decline in endorheic basin water storages
AU - Wang, Jida
AU - Song, Chunqiao
AU - Reager, John T.
AU - Yao, Fangfang
AU - Famiglietti, James S.
AU - Sheng, Yongwei
AU - MacDonald, Glen M.
AU - Brun, Fanny
AU - Schmied, Hannes Müller
AU - Marston, Richard A.
AU - Wada, Yoshihide
N1 - Funding Information:
This research was supported by Kansas State University faculty start-up fund to J.W., NASA Surface Water and Ocean Topography (SWOT) Grant (no. NNX16AH85G) to Y.S. and China’s Thousand Young Talents Program (no. Y7QR011001) to C.S. This work was funded in part by the NASA Sea Level Change team. A portion of this research was conducted at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, under contract with NASA. Assistance for the endorheic basin aggregation and lake mapping was provided by M. Ding, T. Urano and C. Bailey (Kansas State University). We thank E. Berthier (OMP/LEGOS) for support in providing glacier mass change data and comments on the manuscript, and L. Ke, H. Pan and S. Zhan (UCLA) for helping collect meteorological and altimetry data. Constructive suggestions were provided by K. Yang (University of Colorado Boulder) on the SWE validation, Q. Cao (UCLA) on the soil moisture validation, M. Ménégoz (Barcelona Supercomputing Center) on climate variability and J. M. McAlister (Oklahoma State University) on scientific implications and writing.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2018, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited.
PY - 2018/12/1
Y1 - 2018/12/1
N2 - Endorheic (hydrologically landlocked) basins spatially concur with arid/semi-arid climates. Given limited precipitation but high potential evaporation, their water storage is vulnerable to subtle flux perturbations, which are exacerbated by global warming and human activities. Increasing regional evidence suggests a probably recent net decline in endorheic water storage, but this remains unquantified at a global scale. By integrating satellite observations and hydrological modelling, we reveal that during 2002–2016 the global endorheic system experienced a widespread water loss of about 106.3 Gt yr−1, attributed to comparable losses in surface water, soil moisture and groundwater. This decadal decline, disparate from water storage fluctuations in exorheic basins, appears less sensitive to El Niño–Southern Oscillation-driven climate variability, which implies a possible response to longer-term climate conditions and human water management. In the mass-conserved hydrosphere, such an endorheic water loss not only exacerbates local water stress, but also imposes excess water on exorheic basins, leading to a potential sea level rise that matches the contribution of nearly half of the land glacier retreat (excluding Greenland and Antarctica). Given these dual ramifications, we suggest the necessity for long-term monitoring of water storage variation in the global endorheic system and the inclusion of its net contribution to future sea level budgeting.
AB - Endorheic (hydrologically landlocked) basins spatially concur with arid/semi-arid climates. Given limited precipitation but high potential evaporation, their water storage is vulnerable to subtle flux perturbations, which are exacerbated by global warming and human activities. Increasing regional evidence suggests a probably recent net decline in endorheic water storage, but this remains unquantified at a global scale. By integrating satellite observations and hydrological modelling, we reveal that during 2002–2016 the global endorheic system experienced a widespread water loss of about 106.3 Gt yr−1, attributed to comparable losses in surface water, soil moisture and groundwater. This decadal decline, disparate from water storage fluctuations in exorheic basins, appears less sensitive to El Niño–Southern Oscillation-driven climate variability, which implies a possible response to longer-term climate conditions and human water management. In the mass-conserved hydrosphere, such an endorheic water loss not only exacerbates local water stress, but also imposes excess water on exorheic basins, leading to a potential sea level rise that matches the contribution of nearly half of the land glacier retreat (excluding Greenland and Antarctica). Given these dual ramifications, we suggest the necessity for long-term monitoring of water storage variation in the global endorheic system and the inclusion of its net contribution to future sea level budgeting.
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U2 - 10.1038/s41561-018-0265-7
DO - 10.1038/s41561-018-0265-7
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85057612204
SN - 1752-0894
VL - 11
SP - 926
EP - 932
JO - Nature Geoscience
JF - Nature Geoscience
IS - 12
ER -