Abstract

Abstract. The Tibetan Plateau is an essential source of water for Southeast Asia. The runoff from its ~34 000 glaciers, which occupy an area of ~50 000 km2, feeds Tibetan lakes and major Asian rivers like the Indus and Brahmaputra. Reported glacial shrinkage likely has an impact on the runoff. Unfortunately, accurate quantification of glacial changes is difficult over the high-relief Tibetan Plateau. However, it has recently been shown that it is possible to directly assess water level changes of a significant number of the ~900 Tibetan lakes with an area over 1 km2. This paper exploits different remote sensing products to create drainage links between Tibetan glaciers, lakes and rivers. The results allow us to differentiate between lakes with and without outlet. In addition, we introduce the notion of geometric dependency of a lake on glacial runoff, defined as the ratio between the total area of glaciers draining into a lake and the total area of the lake catchment. We determined these dependencies for all ~900 sufficiently large Tibetan lakes. To do so, we combined three remote sensing products: the CAREERI glacier mask product, a lake mask product based on the MODIS MOD44W water product and the HydroSHEDS river network product derived from Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM) elevation data. Using a drainage network analysis, we determined all drainage links between glaciers and lakes. The results show that 25.3% of the total glacier area directly drains into one of 244 Tibetan lakes. The results also give the geometric dependency of each lake on glacial runoff. For example, there are ten lakes with direct glacial runoff from at least 240 km2 of glacier. Three case studies, including one of the well-studied Nam Tso Lake, demonstrate how the geometric dependency of a lake on glacial runoff can be directly linked to hydrological processes.

Highlights

  • The Tibetan Plateau is the highest and largest plateau in the world, and contains a large number of glaciers

  • We calculate for each lake larger than 1 km2 on the Tibetan Plateau (891 in total) how much it is geometrically dependent on glacial runoff

  • The results show that 244 of these lakes receive direct runoff from glaciers while another 22 lakes only obtain glacial meltwater buffered by upstream lakes

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Summary

Introduction

The Tibetan Plateau is the highest and largest plateau in the world, and contains a large number of glaciers. According to Yao et al (2012), the amount of glacier change in the last 30 yr is location dependent, with the largest reduction in glacial length and area occurring in the Himalayas (excluding the Karakoram). Gardelle et al (2012) compared two digital elevation models between 1999 and 2008 and revealed that ice thinning and ablation is occurring at high rates in the central Karakoram and the Himalaya mountain ranges. These glacier reductions will directly affect water level changes on the Tibetan Plateau and its surroundings

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