Abstract

Root zone soil moisture (RZSM) has a direct impact on ecosystem function, vegetation growth and food security, and plays a vital role in global climate system, water and carbon cycles. However, large variations and uncertainties still exist in RZSM across the globe under the warming climate. In this study, we applied comparison map profile (CMP), Theil-Sen regression and partial correlation analysis to investigate the spatial and temporal changes of RZMS and its driving factors from 1981 to 2017 by using three soil moisture products–ERA5, GLDAS and MERRA-2. Results showed that RZSM derived from three products presented a similar spatial pattern that the highest RZSM values occurred in tropical forest and cold areas, followed by subtropical, while the relatively low RZSM values were observed in arid and semiarid regions. Globally, RZSM decreased in all of three datasets with a rate of −0.14 × 10-3 m3 m−3 yr−1 on average (p < 0.001), which was largely correlated with temperature anomalies. Spatially, the RZSM trends greatly varied, with 21–31% of global land areas experiencing a significant decreasing trend and 7–24% for an increasing trend, respectively, confirming their different sensitivities to climate change. Temperature-driven RZSM dominated 19–29% of global land areas and was primarily distributed in northern high-latitude areas. The areas dominated by evapotranspiration were mainly in arid and semiarid areas, accounting for 29–44% of global land areas. Precipitation dominates the remaining 36–45% of global land areas mainly in eastern America and Europe, suggesting variations in the dominance of environmental factors on the spatial patterns of RZSM trend. Our findings will deepen our understanding of the impacts of climate change on the long-term trend of global soil moisture, and will be greatly critical to global soil water resource protection and management under the warming climate.

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