Hydrology and Earth System Sciences (Jul 2024)

Wetting and drying trends in the land–atmosphere reservoir of large basins around the world

  • J. F. Salazar,
  • R. D. Molina,
  • J. I. Zuluaga,
  • J. D. Gomez-Velez

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5194/hess-28-2919-2024
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 28
pp. 2919 – 2947

Abstract

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Global change is altering hydrologic regimes worldwide, including large basins that play a central role in the sustainability of human societies and ecosystems. The basin water budget is a fundamental framework for understanding these basins' sensitivity and future dynamics under changing forcings. In this budget, studies often treat atmospheric processes as external to the basin and assume that atmosphere-related water storage changes are negligible in the long term. These assumptions are potentially misleading in large basins with strong land–atmosphere feedbacks, including terrestrial moisture recycling, which is critical for global water distribution. Here, we introduce the land–atmosphere reservoir (LAR) concept, which includes atmospheric processes as a critical component of the basin water budget and use it to study long-term changes in the water storage of some of the world's largest basins. Our results show significant LAR water storage trends over the last 4 decades, with a marked latitudinal contrast: while low-latitude basins have accumulated water, high-latitude basins have been drying. If they continue, these trends will disrupt the discharge regime and compromise the sustainability of these basins, resulting in widespread impacts.