Underestimating global land greening: future vegetation changes and their impacts on terrestrial water loss

<p>The growing demand for water presents a significant sustainability challenge. Understanding vegetation changes is crucial, as plants significantly influence water exchange through transpiration. However, global climate models show considerable uncertainty in predicting future vegetation tre...

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Автори: Chai, Y, Miao, C, Slater, L, Ciais, P, Berghuijs, WR, Chen, T, Huntingford, C
Формат: Journal article
Мова:English
Опубліковано: Cell Press 2025
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author Chai, Y
Miao, C
Slater, L
Ciais, P
Berghuijs, WR
Chen, T
Huntingford, C
author_facet Chai, Y
Miao, C
Slater, L
Ciais, P
Berghuijs, WR
Chen, T
Huntingford, C
author_sort Chai, Y
collection OXFORD
description <p>The growing demand for water presents a significant sustainability challenge. Understanding vegetation changes is crucial, as plants significantly influence water exchange through transpiration. However, global climate models show considerable uncertainty in predicting future vegetation trends ranging from −0.007 to 0.083 m<sup>2</sup> m⁻<sup>2</sup> decade⁻<sup>1</sup>, impacting water management. Here, we apply an emergent constraint method to reduce uncertainty in global vegetation projections for the period 2015–2100 from a climate model ensemble (Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 6 [CMIP6]), focusing on the leaf area index (LAI). Our approach reduces uncertainty in global LAI projections by 37.7%–53.1%. We find that this uncertainty is primarily due to incomplete representations of the CO<sub>2</sub> fertilization effect. Our results also show that models underestimate future LAI increases by 28.2%–32.1%, leading to underestimated water loss from increased transpiration. These findings improve predictions of future vegetation and transpiration, providing valuable insights for policymakers to adjust water management strategies and better prepare for water-related challenges.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:f94b5d69-f503-4080-af3f-a65a3a2846442025-02-03T12:04:49ZUnderestimating global land greening: future vegetation changes and their impacts on terrestrial water lossJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:f94b5d69-f503-4080-af3f-a65a3a284644EnglishSymplectic ElementsCell Press2025Chai, YMiao, CSlater, LCiais, PBerghuijs, WRChen, THuntingford, C<p>The growing demand for water presents a significant sustainability challenge. Understanding vegetation changes is crucial, as plants significantly influence water exchange through transpiration. However, global climate models show considerable uncertainty in predicting future vegetation trends ranging from −0.007 to 0.083 m<sup>2</sup> m⁻<sup>2</sup> decade⁻<sup>1</sup>, impacting water management. Here, we apply an emergent constraint method to reduce uncertainty in global vegetation projections for the period 2015–2100 from a climate model ensemble (Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 6 [CMIP6]), focusing on the leaf area index (LAI). Our approach reduces uncertainty in global LAI projections by 37.7%–53.1%. We find that this uncertainty is primarily due to incomplete representations of the CO<sub>2</sub> fertilization effect. Our results also show that models underestimate future LAI increases by 28.2%–32.1%, leading to underestimated water loss from increased transpiration. These findings improve predictions of future vegetation and transpiration, providing valuable insights for policymakers to adjust water management strategies and better prepare for water-related challenges.</p>
spellingShingle Chai, Y
Miao, C
Slater, L
Ciais, P
Berghuijs, WR
Chen, T
Huntingford, C
Underestimating global land greening: future vegetation changes and their impacts on terrestrial water loss
title Underestimating global land greening: future vegetation changes and their impacts on terrestrial water loss
title_full Underestimating global land greening: future vegetation changes and their impacts on terrestrial water loss
title_fullStr Underestimating global land greening: future vegetation changes and their impacts on terrestrial water loss
title_full_unstemmed Underestimating global land greening: future vegetation changes and their impacts on terrestrial water loss
title_short Underestimating global land greening: future vegetation changes and their impacts on terrestrial water loss
title_sort underestimating global land greening future vegetation changes and their impacts on terrestrial water loss
work_keys_str_mv AT chaiy underestimatinggloballandgreeningfuturevegetationchangesandtheirimpactsonterrestrialwaterloss
AT miaoc underestimatinggloballandgreeningfuturevegetationchangesandtheirimpactsonterrestrialwaterloss
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AT ciaisp underestimatinggloballandgreeningfuturevegetationchangesandtheirimpactsonterrestrialwaterloss
AT berghuijswr underestimatinggloballandgreeningfuturevegetationchangesandtheirimpactsonterrestrialwaterloss
AT chent underestimatinggloballandgreeningfuturevegetationchangesandtheirimpactsonterrestrialwaterloss
AT huntingfordc underestimatinggloballandgreeningfuturevegetationchangesandtheirimpactsonterrestrialwaterloss