GRACE and GRACE-FO Related Publications (no abstracts)

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Hydrological Variability and Changes in the Arctic Circumpolar Tundra and the Three Largest Pan-Arctic River Basins from 2002 to 2016

Suzuki, Kazuyoshi, Matsuo, Koji, Yamazaki, Dai, Ichii, Kazuhito, Iijima, Yoshihiro, Papa, Fabrice, Yanagi, Yuji, and Hiyama, Tetsuya, 2018. Hydrological Variability and Changes in the Arctic Circumpolar Tundra and the Three Largest Pan-Arctic River Basins from 2002 to 2016. Remote Sensing, 10(3):402, doi:10.3390/rs10030402.

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BibTeX

@ARTICLE{2018RemS...10..402S,
       author = {{Suzuki}, Kazuyoshi and {Matsuo}, Koji and {Yamazaki}, Dai and {Ichii}, Kazuhito and {Iijima}, Yoshihiro and {Papa}, Fabrice and {Yanagi}, Yuji and {Hiyama}, Tetsuya},
        title = "{Hydrological Variability and Changes in the Arctic Circumpolar Tundra and the Three Largest Pan-Arctic River Basins from 2002 to 2016}",
      journal = {Remote Sensing},
     keywords = {Arctic hydrological cycle, terrestrial water storage, satellite gravimetry observation, permafrost distribution, global land data assimilation system},
         year = 2018,
        month = mar,
       volume = {10},
       number = {3},
          eid = {402},
        pages = {402},
     abstract = "{The Arctic freshwater budget is critical for understanding the climate
        in the northern regions. However, the hydrology of the Arctic
        circumpolar tundra region (ACTR) and the largest pan-Arctic
        rivers are still not well understood. In this paper, we analyze
        the spatiotemporal variations in the terrestrial water storage
        (TWS) of the ACTR and three of the largest pan-Arctic river
        basins (Lena, Mackenzie, Yukon). To do this, we utilize monthly
        Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) data from 2002
        to 2016. Together with global land reanalysis, and river runoff
        data, we identify declining TWS trends throughout the ACTR that
        we attribute largely to increasing evapotranspiration driven by
        increasing summer air temperatures. In terms of regional
        changes, large and significant negative trends in TWS are
        observed mainly over the North American continent. At basin
        scale, we show that, in the Lena River basin, the autumnal TWS
        signal persists until the spring of the following year, while in
        the Mackenzie River basin, the TWS level in the autumn and
        winter has no significant impact on the following year. As
        expected global warming is expected to be particularly
        significant in the northern regions, our results are important
        for understanding future TWS trends, with possible further
        decline.}",
          doi = {10.3390/rs10030402},
       adsurl = {https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2018RemS...10..402S},
      adsnote = {Provided by the SAO/NASA Astrophysics Data System}
}

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