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Mid-Latitude Freshwater Availability Reduced by Projected Vegetation Responses to Climate ChangePlants are expected to generate more global-scale runoff under increasing atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations through their influence on surface resistance to evapotranspiration. Recent studies using Earth System Models from phase 5 of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project ostensibly reaffirm this result, further suggesting that plants will ameliorate the dire reductions in water availability projected by other studies that use aridity metrics. Here we complicate this narrative by analysing the change in precipitation partitioning to plants, runoff and storage in multiple Earth system models under both high carbon dioxide concentrations and warming. We show that projected plant responses directly reduce future runoff across vast swaths of North America, Europe and Asia because bulk canopy water demands increase with additional vegetation growth and longer and warmer growing seasons. These runoff declines occur despite increased surface resistance to evapotranspiration and vegetation total water use efficiency, even in regions with increasing or unchanging precipitation. We demonstrate that constraining the large uncertainty in the multimodel ensemble with regional-scale observations of evapotranspiration partitioning strengthens these results. We conclude that terrestrial vegetation plays a large and unresolved role in shaping future regional freshwater availability, one that will not ubiquitously ameliorate future warming-driven surface drying.
Document ID
20190033281
Acquisition Source
Goddard Space Flight Center
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
Mankin, Justin S. ORCID
(Dartmouth Coll. Hanover, NH, United States)
Seager, Richard ORCID
(Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory Palisades, NY, United States)
Smerdon, Jason E.
(Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory Palisades, NY, United States)
Cook, Benjamin I.
(NASA Goddard Inst. for Space Studies (GISS) New York, NY, United States)
Williams, A. Park
(Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory Palisades, NY, United States)
Date Acquired
November 29, 2019
Publication Date
November 4, 2019
Publication Information
Publication: Nature Geoscience
Publisher: Nature Research
Issue: 12
ISSN: 1752-0894
e-ISSN: 1752-0908
Subject Category
Meteorology And Climatology
Report/Patent Number
GSFC-E-DAA-TN75135
E-ISSN: 1752-0908
ISSN: 1752-0894
Report Number: GSFC-E-DAA-TN75135
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: AGS-1602581
CONTRACT_GRANT: GS‐1401400
CONTRACT_GRANT: 16-MAP16-0081
CONTRACT_GRANT: OISE-1743738
CONTRACT_GRANT: AGS‐1243204
CONTRACT_GRANT: AGS‐1805490
CONTRACT_GRANT: AGS-1703029
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Use by or on behalf of the US Gov. Permitted.
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