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Lakes are commonly accepted as a sensitive indicator of regional climate change, including the Tibetan Plateau (TP). This study took the Ranwu Lake, located in the southeastern TP, as the research object to investigate the relationship between the lake and regional hydroclimatological regimes. The well-known Budyko framework was utilized to explore the relationship and its causes. The results showed air temperature, evapotranspiration and potential evapotranspiration in the Ranwu Lake Basin generally increased, while precipitation, soil moisture, and glacier area decreased. The Budyko space indicated that the basin experienced an obviously drying phase first, and then a slightly wetting phase. An overall increase in lake area appears inconsistent with the drying phase of the basin climate. The inconsistency is attributable to the significant expansion of proglacial lakes due to glacial melting, possibly driven by the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation. Our findings should be helpful for understanding the complicated relationships between lakes and climate, and beneficial to water resources management under changing climates, especially in glacier basins.

2025-05-01 Web of Science

Lakes are known as sentinels of climate change, but their responses may differ from one to another leading to different strategies in lake protection. It is particularly the case in the Tibetan Plateau (TP) of multiple hydrological processes. We employed the Budyko framework to study Tibetan lakes from two lake-basins of contrasting climates for the period between 1980 and 2022: Taro Co Basin (TCB) in a sub-arid climate, and Ranwu Lake Basin (RLB) in a sub-humid climate. Our results showed that total lake area, surface air temperature, evapotranspiration, and potential evapotranspiration increased in both lake-basins, while precipitation and soil moisture increased in the TCB but decreased in the RLB. In the Budyko space, two basins had contrast hydroclimatic trajectories in terms of aridity and evaporative index. The TCB shifted from wetting to drying trend, while the RLB from drying to wetting in early 2000s. Notably, lake change was generally consistent with the drying/wetting phases in the TCB, but in contrast with that in the RLB, which can be attributed to warming- induced glacier melting. Despite of significant correlation with the large-scale atmospheric oscillations, it turned to be more plausible if lake area changes were substituted with basin's hydroclimatic trajectories. Among the large-scale oscillations, El Nino-Southern o-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) is the most dominant control of lake trends and their drying/wetting shifts. Our findings offer a valuable insight into lake responses to climate change in the TP and other regions.

2024-11-15 Web of Science
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