Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

Large increase in global storm runoff extremes driven by climate and anthropogenic changes

Jiabo Yin, Pierre Gentine, Sha Zhou, Sylvia Sullivan, Ren Wang, Yao Zhang, Shenglian Guo

Nature Communications · 2018

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Summary

Weather extremes have widespread harmful impacts on ecosystems and human communities with more deaths and economic losses from flash floods than any other severe weather-related hazards. Flash floods attributed to storm runoff extremes are projected to become more frequent and damaging globally due to a warming climate and anthropogenic changes, but previous studies have not examined the response of these storm runoff extremes to naturally and anthropogenically driven changes in surface temperature and atmospheric moisture content. Here we show that storm runoff extremes increase in most regions at rates higher than suggested by Clausius-Clapeyron scaling, which are systematically close to or exceed those of precipitation extremes over most regions of the globe, accompanied by large spatia

Source type
Peer-reviewed study
DOI
10.1038/s41467-018-06765-2
Catalogue ID
SNmokeh85l-qoklvc
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