World's major rivers 'drying up'
Some of the developing world's largest rivers are drying up because of climate change, threatening water supplies in some of the most populous places on Earth, say scientists.
Researchers from the US-based National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) analysed data combined with computer models to assess flow in 925 rivers — nearly three quarters of the world's running water supply — between 1948 and 2004.
A third of these had registered a change in flow and most of them — including the Niger in West Africa, the Ganges in South Asia and the Yellow River in China — were dryer.
Rivers are losing water for a variety of possible reasons, say the researchers, including the installation of dams and the use of water for agriculture. But in many cases the decrease in flow is because of climate change, which is altering rainfall patterns and increasing evaporation because of higher temperatures.
Flow has increased in some developing world rivers. The Brahmaputra in India and China's Yangtze River are stable or have higher flows than in the past but this might not last long, say the scientists, as the Himalayan glaciers that feed them are disappearing.
As well as endangering water supplies, the decreased river flow could affect the world's climate. If less freshwater is discharged into the oceans they become saltier, which could affect salinity- and temperature-driven ocean circulation patterns that in turn play a fundamental role in climate regulation.
The research will be published in the American Meteorological Society's Journal of Climate next month (15 May).
Contact information | n/a |
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News type | Inbrief |
File link |
http://www.scidev.net/en/news/world-s-major-rivers-drying-up-.html |
Source of information | SciDev.Net |
Keyword(s) | climate change |
Subject(s) | HYDRAULICS - HYDROLOGY , NATURAL MEDIUM , RISKS AND CLIMATOLOGY |
Relation | http://www.semide.org/topics/climatechange |
Geographical coverage | International |
News date | 27/04/2009 |
Working language(s) | ENGLISH |