Land‐Atmosphere Coupling Constrains Increases to Potential Evaporation in a Warming Climate: Implications at Local and Global Scales

Abstract The magnitude and extent of runoff reduction, drought intensification, and dryland expansion under climate change are unclear and contentious. A primary reason is disagreement between global circulation models and current potential evaporation (PE) models for the upper limit of evaporation...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Yeonuk Kim, Monica Garcia, Mark S. Johnson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2023-02-01
Series:Earth's Future
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1029/2022EF002886
_version_ 1828004684500041728
author Yeonuk Kim
Monica Garcia
Mark S. Johnson
author_facet Yeonuk Kim
Monica Garcia
Mark S. Johnson
author_sort Yeonuk Kim
collection DOAJ
description Abstract The magnitude and extent of runoff reduction, drought intensification, and dryland expansion under climate change are unclear and contentious. A primary reason is disagreement between global circulation models and current potential evaporation (PE) models for the upper limit of evaporation under warming climatic conditions. An emerging body of research suggests that current PE models including Penman‐Monteith and Priestley‐Taylor may overestimate future evaporation for non‐water‐stressed conditions. However, they are still widely used for climatic impact analysis although the underlying physical mechanisms for PE projections remain unclear. Here, we show that current PE models diverge from observed non‐water‐stressed evaporation across site (>1,500 flux tower site years), watershed (>10,000 watershed‐years), and global (25 climate models) scales. By not incorporating land‐atmosphere coupling processes, current models overestimate non‐water‐stressed evaporation and its driving factors for warmer and drier conditions. To resolve this, we introduce a land‐atmosphere coupled PE model by extending the Surface Flux Equilibrium theory. The proposed PE model accurately reproduces non‐water‐stressed evaporation across spatiotemporal scales. We find that terrestrial PE will increase at a similar rate to ocean evaporation but much slower than rates suggested by current PE models. This finding suggests that land‐atmosphere coupling moderates continental drying trends. Budyko‐based runoff projections incorporating our PE model are well aligned with those from coupled climate simulations, implying that land‐atmosphere coupling is key to improving predictions of climatic impacts on water resources. Our approach provides a simple and robust way to incorporate coupled land‐atmosphere processes into water management tools.
first_indexed 2024-04-10T07:18:49Z
format Article
id doaj.art-b5b16d9ff5c54d0a9c2e4de88dd7ea7d
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2328-4277
language English
last_indexed 2024-04-10T07:18:49Z
publishDate 2023-02-01
publisher Wiley
record_format Article
series Earth's Future
spelling doaj.art-b5b16d9ff5c54d0a9c2e4de88dd7ea7d2023-02-24T17:18:32ZengWileyEarth's Future2328-42772023-02-01112n/an/a10.1029/2022EF002886Land‐Atmosphere Coupling Constrains Increases to Potential Evaporation in a Warming Climate: Implications at Local and Global ScalesYeonuk Kim0Monica Garcia1Mark S. Johnson2Institute for Resources, Environment and Sustainability University of British Columbia Vancouver BC CanadaResearch Centre for the Management of Agricultural and Environmental Risks (CEIGRAM) E.T.S.I. Agronomica, Alimentaria y de Biosistemas Universidad Politecnica de Madrid Madrid SpainInstitute for Resources, Environment and Sustainability University of British Columbia Vancouver BC CanadaAbstract The magnitude and extent of runoff reduction, drought intensification, and dryland expansion under climate change are unclear and contentious. A primary reason is disagreement between global circulation models and current potential evaporation (PE) models for the upper limit of evaporation under warming climatic conditions. An emerging body of research suggests that current PE models including Penman‐Monteith and Priestley‐Taylor may overestimate future evaporation for non‐water‐stressed conditions. However, they are still widely used for climatic impact analysis although the underlying physical mechanisms for PE projections remain unclear. Here, we show that current PE models diverge from observed non‐water‐stressed evaporation across site (>1,500 flux tower site years), watershed (>10,000 watershed‐years), and global (25 climate models) scales. By not incorporating land‐atmosphere coupling processes, current models overestimate non‐water‐stressed evaporation and its driving factors for warmer and drier conditions. To resolve this, we introduce a land‐atmosphere coupled PE model by extending the Surface Flux Equilibrium theory. The proposed PE model accurately reproduces non‐water‐stressed evaporation across spatiotemporal scales. We find that terrestrial PE will increase at a similar rate to ocean evaporation but much slower than rates suggested by current PE models. This finding suggests that land‐atmosphere coupling moderates continental drying trends. Budyko‐based runoff projections incorporating our PE model are well aligned with those from coupled climate simulations, implying that land‐atmosphere coupling is key to improving predictions of climatic impacts on water resources. Our approach provides a simple and robust way to incorporate coupled land‐atmosphere processes into water management tools.https://doi.org/10.1029/2022EF002886potential evaporationevaporative demandevapotranspirationhydroclimatedroughtwater resources
spellingShingle Yeonuk Kim
Monica Garcia
Mark S. Johnson
Land‐Atmosphere Coupling Constrains Increases to Potential Evaporation in a Warming Climate: Implications at Local and Global Scales
Earth's Future
potential evaporation
evaporative demand
evapotranspiration
hydroclimate
drought
water resources
title Land‐Atmosphere Coupling Constrains Increases to Potential Evaporation in a Warming Climate: Implications at Local and Global Scales
title_full Land‐Atmosphere Coupling Constrains Increases to Potential Evaporation in a Warming Climate: Implications at Local and Global Scales
title_fullStr Land‐Atmosphere Coupling Constrains Increases to Potential Evaporation in a Warming Climate: Implications at Local and Global Scales
title_full_unstemmed Land‐Atmosphere Coupling Constrains Increases to Potential Evaporation in a Warming Climate: Implications at Local and Global Scales
title_short Land‐Atmosphere Coupling Constrains Increases to Potential Evaporation in a Warming Climate: Implications at Local and Global Scales
title_sort land atmosphere coupling constrains increases to potential evaporation in a warming climate implications at local and global scales
topic potential evaporation
evaporative demand
evapotranspiration
hydroclimate
drought
water resources
url https://doi.org/10.1029/2022EF002886
work_keys_str_mv AT yeonukkim landatmospherecouplingconstrainsincreasestopotentialevaporationinawarmingclimateimplicationsatlocalandglobalscales
AT monicagarcia landatmospherecouplingconstrainsincreasestopotentialevaporationinawarmingclimateimplicationsatlocalandglobalscales
AT marksjohnson landatmospherecouplingconstrainsincreasestopotentialevaporationinawarmingclimateimplicationsatlocalandglobalscales