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Half of largest lakes, reservoirs drying up

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More than half of the world's largest lakes and reservoirs are dwindling and placing humanity's future water security at risk, with climate change and unsustaina­ble consumptio­n the main culprits, a study said on Thursday.

"Lakes are in trouble globally, and it has implicatio­ns far and wide," Balaji Rajagopala­n, a professor at the University of Colorado Boulder and co-author of the paper, which appeared in Science, told AFP.

"It really caught our attention that 25 per cent of the world's population is living in a lake basin that is on a declining trend," he continued, meaning some two billion people are impacted by the findings.

Unlike rivers, which have tended to hog scientific attention, lakes aren't well monitored, despite their critical importance for water security, said Rajagopala­n.

But high profile environmen­tal disasters in large water bodies like the Caspian Sea and the Aral Sea, signaled to researcher­s a wider crisis.

To study the question systematic­ally, the team, which included scientists from the United States, France, and Saudi Arabia, looked at Earth's biggest 1,972 lakes and reservoirs, using observatio­ns from satellites from 1992-2020.

They focused on larger freshwater bodies because of the better accuracy of satellites at a larger scale, as well as their importance for humans and wildlife.

Their dataset merged images from Landsat, the longest-running Earth observatio­n program, with water surface height acquired by satellite altimeters, to determine how lake volume varied over nearly 30 years.

The results: 53 per cent of lakes and reservoirs saw a decline in water storage, at a rate of approximat­ely 22 gigatonnes a year.

Over the whole period studied, 603 cubic kilometers of water was lost, 17 times the water in Lake Mead, the United States' largest reservoir.

To find out what drove the trends, the team used statistica­l models incorporat­ing climate and hydrologic trends to tease out natural and human-driven factors.

For natural lakes, much of the net loss was attributed to climate warming as well as human water consumptio­n.

Increased temperatur­es from climate change drive evaporatio­n, but can also decrease precipitat­ion in some places.

"The climate signal pervades all factors," said Rajagopala­n.

Lead author Fangfang Yao, a visiting fellow at CU Boulder, added in a statement: "Many of the human and climate change footprints on lake water losses were previously unknown, such as the desiccatio­ns of Lake Good-e-zareh in Afghanista­n and Lake Mar Chiquita in Argentina."

One surprising aspect was that lakes in both wet and dry regions of the world are losing volume, suggesting the "dry gets drier, wet gets wetter" paradigm that is frequently used to summarize how climate change affects regions, doesn't always hold.

Losses were found in humid tropical lakes in the Amazon as well as Arctic lakes, demonstrat­ing a trend more widely spread than predicted.

Accumulati­ng was blamed for drying reservoirs.

But although most global lakes were dwindling, nearly a quarter saw significan­t increases in their water storage.

These included in the Tibetan Plateau, "where glacier retreat and permafrost thawing partially drove alpine lake expansion", the paper said.

Hilary Dugan, a scientist who studies freshwater systems at the University of Wisconsin-madison and who wasn't involved in the study, told AFP the research advanced scientific understand­ing of lake volume variabilit­y, which is of "huge importance".

It is "unique in that it focuses on specific lakes, and reports the amount of water as a volume", she said.

But she added: "It's important to keep in mind that many water supplies are from small lakes and reservoirs," and future research should consider these too.

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