Detection of a direct carbon dioxide effect in continental river runoff records
- PMID: 16482155
- DOI: 10.1038/nature04504
Detection of a direct carbon dioxide effect in continental river runoff records
Abstract
Continental runoff has increased through the twentieth century despite more intensive human water consumption. Possible reasons for the increase include: climate change and variability, deforestation, solar dimming, and direct atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) effects on plant transpiration. All of these mechanisms have the potential to affect precipitation and/or evaporation and thereby modify runoff. Here we use a mechanistic land-surface model and optimal fingerprinting statistical techniques to attribute observational runoff changes into contributions due to these factors. The model successfully captures the climate-driven inter-annual runoff variability, but twentieth-century climate alone is insufficient to explain the runoff trends. Instead we find that the trends are consistent with a suppression of plant transpiration due to CO2-induced stomatal closure. This result will affect projections of freshwater availability, and also represents the detection of a direct CO2 effect on the functioning of the terrestrial biosphere.
Comment in
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Global change: the water cycle freshens up.Nature. 2006 Feb 16;439(7078):793-4. doi: 10.1038/439793a. Nature. 2006. PMID: 16482139 No abstract available.
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Continental runoff: a quality-controlled global runoff data set.Nature. 2006 Dec 7;444(7120):E14; discussion E14-5. doi: 10.1038/nature05480. Nature. 2006. PMID: 17151608
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