The Compensatory CO<sub>2</sub> Fertilization and Stomatal Closure Effects on Runoff Projection From 2016–2099 in the Western United States
Xueyan Zhang, Jiming Jin, Xubin Zeng, Charles P. Hawkins, Antônio Alves Meira Neto, Guo‐Yue Niu
Abstract
Abstract Water availability in the dry western United States (US) under climate change and increasing water use demand has become a serious concern. Previous studies have projected future runoff changes across the western US but ignored the impacts of ecosystem response to elevated CO 2 concentration. Here, we aim to understand the impacts of elevated CO 2 on future runoff changes through ecosystem responses to both rising CO 2 and associated warming using the Noah‐MP model with representations of vegetation dynamics and plant hydraulics. We first validated Noah‐MP against observed runoff, leaf area index (LAI), and terrestrial water storage anomaly from 1980 to 2015. We then projected future runoff with Noah‐MP under downscaled climates from three climate models under Representative Concentration Pathway 8.5. The projected runoff declines variably from the Pacific Northwest by −11% to the Lower Colorado River basin by −92% from 2016 to 2099. To discern the exact causes, we conducted an attribution analysis of the modeled evapotranspiration from two additional sensitivity experiments: one with constant CO 2 and another one with static monthly LAI climatology. Results show that surface “greening” (due to the CO 2 fertilization effect) and the stomatal closure effect are the second largest contributors to future runoff change, following the warming effect. These two counteracting CO 2 effects are roughly compensatory, leaving the warming effect to remain the dominant contributor to the projected runoff declines at large river basin scales. This study suggests that both surface “greening” and stomatal closure effects are important factors and should be considered together in water resource projections.