skip to main content
Tipo de recurso Mostra resultados com: Mostra resultados com: Índice

Climatic or regionally induced by humans? Tracing hydro-climatic and land-use changes to better understand the Lake Urmia tragedy

Khazaei, Bahram ; Khatami, Sina ; Alemohammad, Seyed Hamed ; Rashidi, Lida ; Wu, Changshan ; Madani, Kaveh ; Kalantari, Zahra ; Destouni, Georgia ; Aghakouchak, Amir

Journal of hydrology (Amsterdam), 2019-02, Vol.569, p.203-217 [Periódico revisado por pares]

Elsevier B.V

Texto completo disponível

Citações Citado por
  • Título:
    Climatic or regionally induced by humans? Tracing hydro-climatic and land-use changes to better understand the Lake Urmia tragedy
  • Autor: Khazaei, Bahram ; Khatami, Sina ; Alemohammad, Seyed Hamed ; Rashidi, Lida ; Wu, Changshan ; Madani, Kaveh ; Kalantari, Zahra ; Destouni, Georgia ; Aghakouchak, Amir
  • Assuntos: Anthropogenic change ; Climate change ; Lake Urmia ; Land-use change ; Vegetation ; Water resources management
  • É parte de: Journal of hydrology (Amsterdam), 2019-02, Vol.569, p.203-217
  • Descrição: •Joint analysis of human-landscape and climate drivers of lake shrinkage was performed.•Climate change is not the main cause of water level decline in Lake Urmia.•Agricultural vegetation expansion since 2000 has increased upstream water consumption.•Increased water consumption is the likely driver of Lake Urmia desiccation. Lake Urmia—a shallow endemic hypersaline lake in northwest Iran—has undergone a dramatic decline in its water level (WL), by about 8 m, since 1995. The primary cause of the WL decline in Lake Urmia has been debated in the scientific literature, regarding whether it has been predominantly driven by atmospheric climate change or by human activities in the watershed landscape. Using available climate, hydrological, and vegetation data for the period 1981–2015, this study analyzes and aims to explain the lake desiccation based on other observed hydro-climatic and vegetation changes in the Lake Urmia watershed and classical exploratory statistical methods. The analysis accounts for the relationships between atmospheric climate change (precipitation P, temperature T), and hydrological (soil moisture SM, and WL) and vegetation cover (VC; including agricultural crops and other vegetation) changes in the landscape. Results show that P, T, and SM changes cannot explain the sharp decline in lake WL since 2000. Instead, the agricultural increase of VC in the watershed correlates well with the lake WL change, indicating this human-driven VC and associated irrigation expansion as the dominant human driver of the Lake Urmia desiccation. Specifically, the greater transpiration from the expanded and increasingly irrigated agricultural crops implies increased total evapotranspiration and associated consumptive use of water (inherently related to the irrigation and water diversion and storage developments in the watershed). Thereby the runoff from the watershed into the lake has decreased, and the remaining smaller inflow to the lake has been insufficient for keeping up the previous lake WL, causing the observed WL drop to current conditions.
  • Editor: Elsevier B.V
  • Idioma: Inglês

Buscando em bases de dados remotas. Favor aguardar.