Abstract

AbstractThe Clausius‐Clapeyron relationship holds that the atmospheric water vapor content enhances with warming temperatures, suggesting intensifications of precipitable water and also altering runoff generation. Drought conditions are determined by variations in water fluxes such as precipitation and runoff, which tightly connect with temperature scaling characteristics. However, whether and how water fluxes' scaling with temperatures may affect the evolution of droughts under climate change has not yet been systematically investigated. This study develops a cascade modeling chain consisting of the climate model ensemble, bias correction technique, and hydrological models to investigate the precipitation and runoff scaling relationships with warming temperatures under the current (1961–2005) and future periods (2011–2055 and 2056–2100), as well as their implications on future drought changes across 151 catchments in China. The results show that (1) precipitation (runoff) scaling relationships with temperatures are stable during different time periods; (2) return level analysis indicates drought risks are projected to become (1–10 times) more severe across central and southern catchments, where the precipitation (runoff) strengthens with rising temperatures up to a peak point and then decline in a hotter environment. The northeastern and western catchments, where a monotonic increasing scaling type dominated, are accompanied by drought mitigations for two future periods; (3) future changes in hydrological droughts relative to the baseline are (1–5 times) larger than those in meteorological droughts. These results imply that changes in future drought risks are highly dependent on the present precipitation (runoff)‐temperature relationships, suggesting a meaningful implication of scaling types for future drought prediction.

Highlights

  • Global warming has been manifested in alteration of the water cycle and resulted in more severe weather‐related hazards such as droughts (Naumann et al, 2018)

  • Drought conditions are determined by variations in water fluxes such as precipitation and runoff, which tightly connect with temperature scaling characteristics

  • This study develops a cascade modeling chain consisting of the climate model ensemble, bias correction technique, and hydrological models to investigate the precipitation and runoff scaling relationships with warming temperatures under the current (1961–2005) and future periods (2011–2055 and 2056–2100), as well as their implications on future drought changes across 151 catchments in China

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Summary

Introduction

Global warming has been manifested in alteration of the water cycle and resulted in more severe weather‐related hazards such as droughts (Naumann et al, 2018). The super C‐C scaling rates (higher than 7%/°C) dominates high latitudes, while near or sub C‐C scaling rates (1%–4.5%/°C) are widely observed in tropics (Molnar et al, 2015; Yin et al, 2018) Some departures, such as negative scaling rates, have been detected at high temperatures probably due to limited atmospheric moisture availability and observation artifacts (Hardwick Jones et al, 2010; Nie et al, 2018). Despite such variations in scaling rates, there is a consensus that global precipitation is increasing within both observational and modeling worlds (Ali & Mishra, 2018; Lochbihler et al, 2017; Wang et al, 2017; Westra et al, 2014)

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