Channel water storage anomalies: A new remotely sensed measurement for
global river analysis
Abstract
River channels store large volumes of water globally, critically
impacting ecological and biogeochemical processes. Despite the
importance of river channel storage, there is not yet an observational
constraint on this quantity. We introduce a 26-year record of entirely
remotely sensed volumetric channel water storage anomaly (VCWS) on 26
major world rivers. We find mainstem VCWS climatology amplitude (VCWSCA)
represents an appreciable amount of basin-wide terrestrial water storage
variability (median 2.2%, range 0.05-13.8% across world rivers),
despite the fact that mainstem rivers themselves represent an average of
just 0.2% of basin area. We find that two global river routing schemes
coupled with land surface models reasonably approximate VCWSCA (within
{plus minus}50%) in only 19.2 % and 23.1 % of rivers considered (by
model). These findings demonstrate VCWS is a useful measurement for
assessing global hydrological model performance, and for advancing
understanding of spatial patterns in global hydrology.