The fate of land evaporation – a global dataset
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Published:2020-08-27
Issue:3
Volume:12
Page:1897-1912
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ISSN:1866-3516
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Container-title:Earth System Science Data
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Earth Syst. Sci. Data
Author:
Link Andreas, van der Ent RuudORCID, Berger Markus, Eisner StephanieORCID, Finkbeiner Matthias
Abstract
Abstract. Various studies investigated the fate of evaporation and
the origin of precipitation. The more recent studies among them were often
carried out with the help of numerical moisture tracking. Many research
questions could be answered within this context, such as dependencies of
atmospheric moisture transfers between different regions, impacts of land
cover changes on the hydrological cycle, sustainability-related questions, and questions regarding the seasonal and interannual variability of
precipitation. In order to facilitate future applications, global datasets
on the fate of evaporation and the sources of precipitation are needed.
Since most studies are on a regional level and focus more on the sources of
precipitation, the goal of this study is to provide a readily available
global dataset on the fate of evaporation for a fine-meshed grid of source
and receptor cells. The dataset was created through a global run of the
numerical moisture tracking model Water
Accounting Model-2layers (WAM-2layers) and focused on the fate of
land evaporation. The tracking was conducted on a 1.5∘×1.5∘ grid and was based on reanalysis data from the ERA-Interim
database. Climatic input data were incorporated in 3- to 6-hourly time steps
and represent the time period from 2001 to 2018. Atmospheric moisture was
tracked forward in time and the geographical borders of the model were
located at ±79.5∘ latitude. As a result of the model run, the
annual, the monthly and the interannual average fate of evaporation
were determined for 8684 land grid cells (all land cells except those located
within Greenland and Antarctica) and provided via source–receptor matrices.
The gained dataset was complemented via an aggregation to country and basin
scales in order to highlight possible usages for areas of interest larger
than grid cells. This resulted in data for 265 countries and 8223 basins.
Finally, five types of source–receptor matrices for average moisture
transfers were chosen to build the core of the dataset: land grid cell to
grid cell, country to grid cell, basin to grid cell, country to country,
basin to basin. The dataset is, to our knowledge, the first
ready-to-download dataset providing the overall fate of evaporation for land
cells of a global fine-meshed grid in monthly resolution. At the same time,
information on the sources of precipitation can be extracted from it. It
could be used for investigations into average annual, seasonal, and
interannual sink and source regions of atmospheric moisture from land
masses for most of the regions in the world and shows various application
possibilities for studying interactions between people and water, such as
land cover changes or human water consumption patterns. The dataset is
accessible under https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.908705
(Link et al., 2019a) and comes along with example scripts
for reading and plotting the data.
Funder
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences
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