Soil moisture–atmosphere feedbacks mitigate declining water availability in drylands
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Date
2021-01Type
- Journal Article
Citations
Cited 69 times in
Web of Science
Cited 72 times in
Scopus
ETH Bibliography
yes
Altmetrics
Abstract
Global warming alters surface water availability (precipitation minus evapotranspiration, P–E) and hence freshwater resources. However, the influence of land–atmosphere feedbacks on future P–E changes and the underlying mechanisms remain unclear. Here we demonstrate that soil moisture (SM) strongly impacts future P–E changes, especially in drylands, by regulating evapotranspiration and atmospheric moisture inflow. Using modelling and empirical approaches, we find a consistent negative SM feedback on P–E, which may offset ~60% of the decline in dryland P–E otherwise expected in the absence of SM feedbacks. The negative feedback is not caused by atmospheric thermodynamic responses to declining SM; rather, reduced SM, in addition to limiting evapotranspiration, regulates atmospheric circulation and vertical ascent to enhance moisture transport into drylands. This SM effect is a large source of uncertainty in projected dryland P–E changes, underscoring the need to better constrain future SM changes and improve the representation of SM–atmosphere processes in models. Show more
Publication status
publishedExternal links
Journal / series
Nature Climate ChangeVolume
Pages / Article No.
Publisher
Nature Publishing GroupOrganisational unit
03778 - Seneviratne, Sonia / Seneviratne, Sonia
Related publications and datasets
Is referenced by: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11850/528410
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Show all metadata
Citations
Cited 69 times in
Web of Science
Cited 72 times in
Scopus
ETH Bibliography
yes
Altmetrics