articleScienceApr 26, 2012GREEN OA

Ocean Salinities Reveal Strong Global Water Cycle Intensification During 1950 to 2000

CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere · Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory · +1 more institution

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Fundamental thermodynamics and climate models suggest that dry regions will become drier and wet regions will become wetter in response to warming. Efforts to detect this long-term response in sparse surface observations of rainfall and evaporation remain ambiguous. We show that ocean salinity patterns express an identifiable fingerprint of an intensifying water cycle. Our 50-year observed global surface salinity changes, combined with changes from global climate models, present robust evidence of an intensified global water cycle at a rate of 8 ± 5% per degree of surface warming. This rate is double the response projected by current-generation climate models and suggests that a substantial (16 to 24%)…

Citation impact

1,064
total citations
FWCI
53.65
Percentile
100%
References
55
Citations per year

Authors

3

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Water cycle
  • Environmental science
  • Salinity
  • Global warming
  • Climatology
  • Climate change
  • Evaporation
  • Climate model
No related works found for this paper.