Impacts of frozen ground degradation and vegetation greening on upper Brahmaputra runoff during 1981–2019

Author:

Wang Yuanwei1ORCID,Wang Lei23ORCID,Zhou Jing2,Chai Chenhao23,Hu Zhidan4,Zhao Lin1,Wang Shengfeng1,Fan Mengtian1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Geographical Sciences Nanjing University of Information Science & Technology Nanjing China

2. State Key Laboratory of Tibetan Plateau Earth System, Environment and Resources (TPESER) Institute of Tibetan Plateau Research, Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China

3. University of Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China

4. Information Center Ministry of Water Resources Beijing China

Abstract

AbstractThe Tibetan Plateau (TP) contains the largest permafrost region in the mid–low latitudes and the largest area of glaciers outside of the polar regions. In recent decades, this region has experienced vegetation greening (e.g., increasing leaf area index) due to climate change. As the largest exorheic river on the TP, the Upper Brahmaputra Basin (UBB) is very sensitive to climate change, experiencing the humidifying and significant warming. In this study, we investigated the spatiotemporal variability of frozen ground and vegetation over the last four decades in the UBB and explored how these changes have impacted river runoff using a water‐ and energy‐budget distributed hydrological model (WEB‐DHM). We found that almost 50% of permafrost transformed into seasonally frozen or unfrozen ground from 1981 to 2019 with the great improvement of vegetation leaf area index (LAI). Based on the variable‐controlling approach (set the air temperature or vegetation unchanged), we revealed that frozen ground degradation caused an average of 9.3 billion m3 of water loss per year, accounting for 5.4% of total UBB river runoff, even if frozen ground degradation can increase water resources at the early stage. However, vegetation greening has caused a runoff decline by 10.9 billion m3 (6.4%) annually due to enhanced evapotranspiration. These findings highlight that it is critical to understand and mitigate the impacts of changing frozen ground and vegetation, when managing water resources availability and ecosystem conservation under rapid climate change.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Atmospheric Science

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