Litcius/Paper detail

The central role of forests in the 2021 European floods

Damián Insúa-Costa, Martín Senande-Rivera, María Carmen Llasat, Gonzalo Miguez‐Macho

2022Environmental Research Letters16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Plants play a key role in the hydrological cycle, yet their contribution to extreme rainfall remains uncertain. Here we show that more than half of the vast amounts of water accumulated in the recent Germany and Belgium floods were supplied by vegetation (41% from transpiration, 11% from interception loss). We found that intercontinental transport of moisture from North American forests (which contributed more than 463 billion liters of water to the event) was a more important source than evaporation over nearby seas, such as the Mediterranean or the North Sea. Our results demonstrate that summer rainfall extremes in Europe may be strongly dependent on plant behavior and suggest that significant alterations in vegetation cover, even of remote regions, could have a direct effect on these potentially catastrophic events.

Topics & Concepts

Environmental scienceInterceptionVegetation (pathology)Mediterranean climateWater cycleTranspirationClimatologyGeographyEcologyGeologyBotanyBiologyArchaeologyPhotosynthesisPathologyMedicinePlant Water Relations and Carbon DynamicsClimate variability and modelsTree-ring climate responses
The central role of forests in the 2021 European floods | Litcius