Droughts have devastating effects on various sectors and are difficult to quantify and track because of the invisible and slow but prevalent propagation. This dilemma is more significant in the case of the complex interactions between land and atmosphere mechanisms, which are inadequately considered in previous drought metrics. Here, we investigate the spatiotemporal variability of the recently devised metric called 'Drought Potential Index (DPI)', which incorporates the antecedent land water storage and current precipitation. Using the spatial weighted centroid method, we elucidate the emerging spatial movement of the DPI within 168 major global river basins and analyze its influential factors. Improved drought detection and performance disparity of DPI as compared with multi-scale (i.e., 1, 3, 6, 9, 12-month) Standardized Precipitation Index, ensemble soil moisture anomaly, and Total Storage Deficit Index corroborate the robustness and improved insights of DPI. Higher increasing trends in DPI are detected over dryland basins (0.39 ± 0.43 %/a) than in the humid zones (0.15 ± 0.34 %/a). Six hotspot basins, namely, Don, Yellow, Haihe, Rio Grande, Sao Francisco, and Ganges river basins, are identified with increasing (2.1-3.5%/a) DPI during 2003-2021. The interannual occurrence of the highest DPI, spatial shifts, and relative contribution of DPI's constituent variables correspond well to the climatic and anthropogenic changes in humid and dry land basins. The absolute latitudinal/longitudinal shifts of ∼2° (as high as ∼3.2/4.9°) in DPI in 30% (47 out of 168 basins) of the global basins highlight the need for analyzing the water scarcity problems from both the perspectives of long-term trends and spatial shifts. Our findings provide a global assessment of the spatiotemporal shifts of drought potential and will be beneficial to understanding the anthropogenic and climatic influences on water resource management under a changing environment.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2024.120093 | DOI Listing |
Mol Biol Cell
January 2025
Department of Cell Biology, Emory University, 615 Michael St, Atlanta, GA, USA, 30322.
Rare inherited diseases caused by mutations in the copper transporters (CTR1) or induce copper deficiency in the brain, causing seizures and neurodegeneration in infancy through poorly understood mechanisms. Here, we used multiple model systems to characterize the molecular mechanisms by which neuronal cells respond to copper deficiency. Targeted deletion of CTR1 in neuroblastoma cells produced copper deficiency that produced a metabolic shift favoring glycolysis over oxidative phosphorylation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnn N Y Acad Sci
January 2025
Environmental Physics Laboratory (EPhysLab), Centro de Investigación Mariña, Universidade de Vigo, Ourense, Spain.
This study uses a combination of the FLEXPART Lagrangian dispersion model with the Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) mesoscale Eulerian model (FLEXPART-WRF) to analyze the expected mid- to late-century changes in the moisture sources and sinks of the North American East Coast (ENA) and the Gulf of Mexico (GM), as well as their most relevant abrupt moisture transport events-atmospheric rivers (ARs) and low-level jets of the Great Plains (GPLLJ) and the Caribbean (CLLJ). Both the ENA and GM are expected to increase in importance as moisture source regions over the century, both overall and in their contributions to the ARs and both LLJs. A notable increase in the intensity of the GPLLJ and CLLJ moisture sources is also observed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe Goos-Hänchen and Imbert-Fedorov shifts are significant wave phenomena, yet the underlying mechanism governing the spatiotemporal vortex pulses reflected and refracted on graphene remains opaque. In this study, we analytically derive the expressions for the centroid shifts of spatiotemporal vortex pulses by applying the Fresnel-Snell formulas to each plane wave in the incident spatiotemporal vortex pulse spectrum. We demonstrate that the longitudinal shifts are correlated with the angular shifts, and thus, both are subject to resonant enhancement in the vicinity of the Brewster angle.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report a hybrid Brillouin optical frequency/correlation-domain analysis technique, capable of accurate and high spatial resolution Brillouin frequency shift (BFS) profile measurements in optical fibers. The method relies on a conventional Brillouin optical frequency domain analysis (BOFDA) configuration, with an additional sinusoidal frequency modulation (FM) applied to the pump and probe beams. Such frequency modulation synthetizes a sequence of narrow correlation peaks along the fiber, which are simultaneously interrogated through BOFDA.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGhost holography has attracted notable applied interest in the modern quantitative imaging applications with the futuristic features of complex field recovery in the diversified imaging scenarios. However, the utilization of digital holography in ghost frame works introduces space bandwidth or time bandwidth restrictions in the implementation of the technique in applied domains. Here, we propose and demonstrate a quantitative ghost phase imaging approach with holographic ghost diffraction scheme in combination with the phase-shifting technique.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!