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Article
Satellite-based Global-ocean Mass Balance Estimates of Interannual Variability and Emerging Trends in Continental Freshwater Discharge
PNAS
  • Tajdarul H. Syed, University of California
  • James S. Famiglietti, University of California
  • Don P. Chambers, University of South Florida
  • Josh K. Willis, California Institute of Technology
  • Kyle Hilburn, Remote Sensing Systems
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
10-1-2010
Keywords
  • climate,
  • global water cycle,
  • hydrology,
  • remote sensing,
  • observations
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1003292107
Disciplines
Abstract

Freshwater discharge from the continents is a key component of Earth’s water cycle that sustains human life and ecosystem health. Surprisingly, owing to a number of socioeconomic and political obstacles, a comprehensive global river discharge observing system does not yet exist. Here we use 13 years (1994–2006) of satellite precipitation, evaporation, and sea level data in an ocean mass balance to estimate freshwater discharge into the global ocean. Results indicate that global freshwater discharge averaged 36,055 km3/y for the study period while exhibiting significant interannual variability driven primarily by El Niño Southern Oscillation cycles. The method described here can ultimately be used to estimate long-term global discharge trends as the records of sea level rise and ocean temperature lengthen. For the relatively short 13-year period studied here, global discharge increased by 540 km3/y2, which was largely attributed to an increase of global-ocean evaporation (768 km3/y2). Sustained growth of these flux rates into long-term trends would provide evidence for increasing intensity of the hydrologic cycle.

Citation / Publisher Attribution

PNAS, v. 107, issue, 42, p. 17916-17921

Citation Information
Tajdarul H. Syed, James S. Famiglietti, Don P. Chambers, Josh K. Willis, et al.. "Satellite-based Global-ocean Mass Balance Estimates of Interannual Variability and Emerging Trends in Continental Freshwater Discharge" PNAS Vol. 107 Iss. 42 (2010) p. 17916 - 17921
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/don_chambers/76/