Impact of Climate Change on River Discharge Projected by Multimodel Ensemble

Author:

Nohara Daisuke1,Kitoh Akio2,Hosaka Masahiro2,Oki Taikan3

Affiliation:

1. Meteorological Research Institute, Tsukuba, and CREST, Japan Science and Technology Agency, Kawaguchi, Japan

2. Meteorological Research Institute, Tsukuba, Japan

3. Institute of Industrial Science, University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan

Abstract

Abstract This study investigates the projections of river discharge for 24 major rivers in the world during the twenty-first century simulated by 19 coupled atmosphere–ocean general circulation models based on the Special Report on Emissions Scenarios A1B scenario. To reduce model bias and uncertainty, a weighted ensemble mean (WEM) is used for multimodel projections. Although it is difficult to reproduce the present river discharge in any single model, the WEM results produce more accurate reproduction for most rivers, except those affected by anthropogenic water usage. At the end of the twenty-first century, the annual mean precipitation, evaporation, and runoff increase in high latitudes of the Northern Hemisphere, southern to eastern Asia, and central Africa. In contrast, they decrease in the Mediterranean region, southern Africa, southern North America, and Central America. Although the geographical distribution of the changes in precipitation and runoff tends to coincide with that in the river discharge, it should be emphasized that the change in runoff at the upstream region affects the river flow in the downstream region. In high-latitude rivers (Amur, Lena, MacKenzie, Ob, Yenisei, and Yukon), the discharge increases, and the peak timing shifts earlier because of an earlier snowmelt caused by global warming. Discharge tends to decrease for the rivers in Europe to the Mediterranean region (Danube, Euphrates, and Rhine), and southern United Sates (Rio Grande).

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

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