Excess water availability in northern mid-high latitudes contiguously migrated from ocean under climate change

  • Yansong Guan
  • , Xihui Gu
  • , Lunche Wang
  • , Tianjun Zhou
  • , Jun Xia
  • , Dabang Jiang
  • , Louise J. Slater
  • , Luis Gimeno
  • , Yadu Pokhrel
  • , Gabriele Villarini
  • , Jong Seong Kug
  • , Seok Woo Son
  • , Richard P. Allan
  • , Jianfeng Li
  • , Thian Yew Gan
  • , Yinxue Liu
  • , Dongdong Kong
  • , Xiang Zhang
  • , Xiangsen Cui

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Terrestrial water availability sustains livelihoods, socioeconomic development, and ecosystems. Despite an understanding of contributions of oceanic moisture to terrestrial hydroclimatic extremes, whether surpluses of terrestrial water availability migrate directly and contiguously from the ocean and the influence of climate change on this process remain unclear. Here, we use a coherent feature-tracking method to identify ocean-to-land water availability surpluses (OWASs), characterized by spatiotemporally contiguous migration of excess atmospheric freshwater (precipitation-minus-evapotranspiration) from ocean to land. Over the past several decades, especially in northern mid-high latitudes (NMHL; above 48°N), OWASs have exhibited longer persistence, wider areal extent, and greater intensity than those developed solely over land. These landward migrations are associated with seasonal Atlantic teleconnection and Pacific circulation shift. Under the business-as-usual scenario, these two processes are projected to be enhanced, markedly increasing OWAS characteristics in NMHL driven by thermodynamic atmospheric responses to future warming. Intensified OWASs may not only help alleviate long-term droughts but also have the potential to accentuate pluvial risks.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article numbereadv0282
JournalScience Advances
Volume11
Issue number33
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 15 2025

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • General

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