Multi-decadal trends in global terrestrial evapotranspiration and its components

Yongqiang Zhang(CSIRO Land and Water), Jorge L. Peña‐Arancibia(CSIRO Land and Water), Tim R. McVicar(ARC Centre of Excellence for Climate System Science), Francis H. S. Chiew(CSIRO Land and Water), Jai Vaze(CSIRO Land and Water), Changming Liu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Xingjie Lu(CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere), Hongxing Zheng(CSIRO Land and Water), Ying‐Ping Wang(CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere), Yi Liu(UNSW Sydney), Diego G. Miralles(Ghent University), Ming Pan(Princeton University)
Scientific Reports
January 11, 2016
Cited by 770Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Evapotranspiration (ET) is the process by which liquid water becomes water vapor and energetically this accounts for much of incoming solar radiation. If this ET did not occur temperatures would be higher, so understanding ET trends is crucial to predict future temperatures. Recent studies have reported prolonged declines in ET in recent decades, although these declines may relate to climate variability. Here, we used a well-validated diagnostic model to estimate daily ET during 1981-2012, and its three components: transpiration from vegetation (Et), direct evaporation from the soil (Es) and vaporization of intercepted rainfall from vegetation (Ei). During this period, ET over land has increased significantly (p < 0.01), caused by increases in Et and Ei, which are partially counteracted by Es decreasing. These contrasting trends are primarily driven by increases in vegetation leaf area index, dominated by greening. The overall increase in Et over land is about twofold of the decrease in Es. These opposing trends are not simulated by most Coupled Model Intercomparison Project phase 5 (CMIP5) models, and highlight the importance of realistically representing vegetation changes in earth system models for predicting future changes in the energy and water cycle.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis