Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5752371 Journal of Hydrology: Regional Studies 2017 16 Pages PDF
Abstract
Evapotranspiration (ET) and water yield (WY) with projected CO2, precipitation, and temperature during 2044-2070 were affected by each climate factor separately and synergistically. Increasing CO2 to 600 ppm only scenario resulted in an ET decrease (5-17%) which led to WY increase (17-36%). With projected temperature increases (1-5 °C) only scenarios, ET was projected to increase noticeably (12-112%) especially in winter and spring. The amount of projected ET increase was reduced by a CO2 increase to 600 ppm due to decreased stomatal conductance. Projected WY varied due to the high variability of future precipitation patterns (−54% to 33%) but generally increased when solely precipitation projections were applied. However, WY with combined effects of CO2, precipitation, and temperature did not show significant changes compared with the historical WY. Therefore, it is necessary to incorporate interactions of precipitation, temperature, and CO2 to simulate future water availability in the North Carolina Piedmont.
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Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Earth-Surface Processes
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