Hydrological Intensification Will Increase the Complexity of Water Resource Management

Bibliographic Details
Title: Hydrological Intensification Will Increase the Complexity of Water Resource Management
Authors: Darren L. Ficklin, Sarah E. Null, John T. Abatzoglou, Kimberly A. Novick, Daniel T. Myers
Source: Earth's Future, Vol 10, Iss 3, Pp n/a-n/a (2022)
Publisher Information: Wiley, 2022.
Publication Year: 2022
Collection: LCC:Environmental sciences
LCC:Ecology
Subject Terms: climate change, water resources, hydrology, precipitation, evaporative demand, Environmental sciences, GE1-350, Ecology, QH540-549.5
More Details: Abstract Global warming intensifies the hydrological cycle by altering the rate of water fluxes to and from the terrestrial surface, resulting in an increase in extreme precipitation events and longer dry spells. Prior hydrological intensification work has largely focused on precipitation without joint consideration of evaporative demand changes and how plants respond to these changes. Informed by state‐of‐the‐art climate models, we examine projected changes in hydrological intensification and its role in complicating water resources management using a framework that accounts for precipitation surplus and evaporative demand. Using a metric that combines the difference between daily precipitation and daily evaporative demand (surplus events) and consecutive days when evaporative demand exceeds precipitation (deficit time), we show that, globally, surplus events will become larger (+11.5% and +18.5% for moderate and high emission scenarios, respectively) and the duration between them longer (+5.1%; +9.6%) by the end of the century, with the largest changes in the northern latitudes. The intra‐annual occurrence of these extremes will stress existing water management infrastructure in major river basins, where over one third of years during 2070–2100 under a moderate emissions scenario will be hydrologically intense (large intra‐annual increases in surplus intensity and deficit time), tripling that of the historical baseline. Larger increases in hydrologically intense years are found in basins with large reservoir capacity (e.g., Amazon, Congo, and Danube River Basins), which have significant populations, irrigate considerable farmland, and support threatened and endangered aquatic species. Incorporating flexibility into water resource infrastructure and management will be paramount with continued hydrological intensification.
Document Type: article
File Description: electronic resource
Language: English
ISSN: 2328-4277
Relation: https://doaj.org/toc/2328-4277
DOI: 10.1029/2021EF002487
Access URL: https://doaj.org/article/d71d8b5e27ec4808856c4939698a36cd
Accession Number: edsdoj.71d8b5e27ec4808856c4939698a36cd
Database: Directory of Open Access Journals
More Details
ISSN:23284277
DOI:10.1029/2021EF002487
Published in:Earth's Future
Language:English