Articles | Volume 27, issue 24
https://doi.org/10.5194/hess-27-4409-2023
https://doi.org/10.5194/hess-27-4409-2023
Research article
 | 
14 Dec 2023
Research article |  | 14 Dec 2023

Recent ground thermo-hydrological changes in a southern Tibetan endorheic catchment and implications for lake level changes

Léo C. P. Martin, Sebastian Westermann, Michele Magni, Fanny Brun, Joel Fiddes, Yanbin Lei, Philip Kraaijenbrink, Tamara Mathys, Moritz Langer, Simon Allen, and Walter W. Immerzeel

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Cited articles

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Aoya, M., Wallis, S. R., Terada, K., Lee, J., Kawakami, T., Wang, Y., and Heizler, M.: North-south extension in the Tibetan crust triggered by granite emplacement, Geology, 33, 853, https://doi.org/10.1130/G21806.1, 2005. 
Bhattacharya, A., Bolch, T., Mukherjee, K., King, O., Menounos, B., Kapitsa, V., Neckel, N., Yang, W., and Yao, T.: High Mountain Asian glacier response to climate revealed by multi-temporal satellite observations since the 1960s, Nat. Commun., 12, 4133, https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-24180-y, 2021. 
Bibi, S., Wang, L., Li, X., Zhou, J., Chen, D., and Yao, T.: Climatic and associated cryospheric, biospheric, and hydrological changes on the Tibetan Plateau: a review, Int. J. Climatol., 38, e1–e17, https://doi.org/10.1002/joc.5411, 2018. 
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Short summary
Across the Tibetan Plateau, many large lakes have been changing level during the last decades as a response to climate change. In high-mountain environments, water fluxes from the land to the lakes are linked to the ground temperature of the land and to the energy fluxes between the ground and the atmosphere, which are modified by climate change. With a numerical model, we test how these water and energy fluxes have changed over the last decades and how they influence the lake level variations.