Why has catchment evaporation increased in the past 40 years? A data-based study in Austria
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Published:2018-10-04
Issue:10
Volume:22
Page:5143-5158
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ISSN:1607-7938
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Container-title:Hydrology and Earth System Sciences
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Hydrol. Earth Syst. Sci.
Author:
Duethmann DorisORCID, Blöschl Günter
Abstract
Abstract. Regional evaporation has increased in many parts of the world in the last
decades, but the drivers of these increases are widely debated. Part of the
difficulty lies in the scarcity of high-quality long-term data on
evaporation. In this paper, we analyze changes in catchment evaporation
estimated from the water balances of 156 catchments in Austria over the
period 1977–2014 and attribute them to changes in atmospheric demand and
available energy, vegetation, and precipitation as possible drivers. Trend
analyses suggest that evaporation has significantly increased in 60 % of
the catchments (p≤0.05) with an average increase of
29±14 mm yr−1 decade−1 (± standard deviation) or
4.9±2.3 % decade−1. Pan evaporation based on 24 stations has, on
average, increased by 29±5 mm yr−1 decade−1 or
6.0±1.0 % decade−1. Reference evaporation over the 156 catchments
estimated by the Penman–Monteith equation has increased by
18±5 mm yr−1 decade−1 or 2.8±0.7 % decade−1. Of
these, 2.1 % are due to increased global radiation and 0.5 % due to
increased air temperature according to the Penman–Monteith equation. A
satellite-based vegetation index (NDVI) has increased by
0.02±0.01 decade−1 or 3.1±1.1 % decade−1. Estimates of
reference evaporation accounting for changes in stomata resistance due to
changes in the NDVI indicate that the increase in vegetation activity has led
to a similar increase in reference evaporation as changes in the climate
parameters. A regression between trends in evaporation and precipitation
yields a sensitivity of a 0.22±0.05 mm yr−2 increase in
evaporation to a 1 mm yr−2 increase in precipitation. A synthesis of
the data analyses suggests that 43±15 % of the observed increase in
catchment evaporation may be directly attributed to increased atmospheric
demand and available energy, 34±14 % to increased vegetation activity,
and 24±5 % to increases in precipitation.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Engineering,General Environmental Science
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