Correlation Engine 2.0
Clear Search sequence regions


  • biomass (1)
  • forests (1)
  • minus (3)
  • rivers (1)
  • soil (4)
  • steam (2)
  • water vapor (2)
  • Sizes of these terms reflect their relevance to your search.

    Atmospheric humidity and soil moisture in the Amazon forest are tightly coupled to the region's water balance, or the difference between two moisture fluxes, evapotranspiration minus precipitation (ET-P). However, large and poorly characterized uncertainties in both fluxes, and in their difference, make it challenging to evaluate spatiotemporal variations of water balance and its dependence on ET or P. Here, we show that satellite observations of the HDO/H2O ratio of water vapor are sensitive to spatiotemporal variations of ET-P over the Amazon. When calibrated by basin-scale and mass-balance estimates of ET-P derived from terrestrial water storage and river discharge measurements, the isotopic data demonstrate that rainfall controls wet Amazon water balance variability, but ET becomes important in regulating water balance and its variability in the dry Amazon. Changes in the drivers of ET, such as above ground biomass, could therefore have a larger impact on soil moisture and humidity in the dry (southern and eastern) Amazon relative to the wet Amazon. © 2022. The Author(s).

    Citation

    Mingjie Shi, John R Worden, Adriana Bailey, David Noone, Camille Risi, Rong Fu, Sarah Worden, Robert Herman, Vivienne Payne, Thomas Pagano, Kevin Bowman, A Anthony Bloom, Sassan Saatchi, Junjie Liu, Joshua B Fisher. Amazonian terrestrial water balance inferred from satellite-observed water vapor isotopes. Nature communications. 2022 May 13;13(1):2686

    Expand section icon Mesh Tags

    Expand section icon Substances


    PMID: 35562340

    View Full Text