Abstract

Lakes on the Tibetan Plateau have experienced variations over the last several decades, and the delineation of lake dynamics is favorable for the regional water cycle and can serve as important information for plateau environmental research. This study focused on 57 lakes near the Tanggula Mountains on the southeastern Tibetan Plateau. Yearly inundations of the lakes in 1989–2019 and altimeter data available for 2003–2020 were integrated to illustrate the changing patterns of glacier-fed and non-glacier-fed lakes. These two groups of lakes presented very similar evolution stages. They both increased in 1989–1992, decreased in 1992–1996, increased rapidly in 1998–2005, and had batch-wise fluctuations since 2005, with respective areas of around 5305.28 and 1636.79 km2 in the last decade. The non-glacier-fed lakes were more sensitive to precipitation variation, and glacier-fed lakes were more sensitive to temperature changes. Based on lakes with obvious changes in water level, the whole water storage variations of the studied lakes were 1.90 Gt/y in 2003–2009, including 1.80 Gt/y for glacier-fed lakes and 0.10 Gt/y for non-glacier-fed lakes. The contribution from glacier melting in 2003–2009 amounted to 16.11% of the whole lake volume increase. In 2010–2020, water mass changes were 0.42 Gt/y for glacier-fed lakes and −0.14 Gt/y for non-glacier-fed lakes, respectively. The volume increase of glacier-fed lakes in 2010–2020 was mainly due to the expansion of Selin Co. Selin Co experienced a water increase of about 0.46 Gt/y, and the other glacier-fed lakes experienced a decreasing volume of −0.04 Gt/y. In 2010–2020, 99.43% of the glacier contribution supplied Selin Co.

Highlights

  • The Tibetan Plateau (TP) is famously named “The third pole” and the “Water tower of Asia” [1]

  • ICESat and CryoSat-2 data were used in conjunction to study the water level changes of Nam Co and the results showed that Nam Co’s level increased at a rate of 24 cm/y in 2003–2008, dropped at a rate of −9 cm/y in 2009–2013 [15]

  • Area-level curves were constructed based on ICESat data and Landsat images for 30 lakes on the TP, and the results indicated that the lake volume increased by 92.43 km3 from the

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Summary

Introduction

The Tibetan Plateau (TP) is famously named “The third pole” and the “Water tower of Asia” [1]. This plateau covers an area of approximately 2,500,000 km , with an average altitude of more than 4000 m. The TP is the third-largest area of frozen water: around. 46,000 glaciers with an area of 100,000 km. The total area of lakes (>1 km2 ) is greater than 45,000 km2 [2]. Glaciers influence the water resources of lakes on the TP [4]. The glacier area in west China has retreated by

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