Abstract
Abstract. River discharges from Siberia are a large source of freshwater into the
Arctic Ocean, whereas the cause of the long-term variation in Siberian
discharges is still unclear. The observed river discharges of the Lena in the
east and the Ob in the west indicated different relationships in each of the
epochs during the past 7 decades. The correlations between the two river
discharges were negative during the 1980s to mid-1990s, positive during the
mid-1950s to 1960s, and became weak after the mid-1990s. More long-term
records of tree-ring-reconstructed discharges have also shown differences in
the correlations in each of the epochs. It is noteworthy that the
correlations obtained from the reconstructions tend to be negative during the
past 2 centuries. Such tendency has also been obtained from precipitations
in observations, and in simulations with an atmospheric general circulation
model (AGCM) and fully coupled atmosphere–ocean GCMs conducted for the
Fourth Assessment Report of the IPCC. The AGCM control simulation further
demonstrated that an east–west seesaw pattern of summertime large-scale
atmospheric circulation frequently emerges over Siberia as an atmospheric
internal variability. This results in an opposite anomaly of precipitation
over the Lena and Ob and the negative correlation. Consequently, the
summertime atmospheric internal variability in the east–west seesaw pattern over
Siberia is a key factor influencing the long-term variation in precipitation
and river discharge, i.e., the water cycle in this region.
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences
Cited by
10 articles.
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