Increasing Risks of Water Supply Reduction and Flow Disruptions from the
Headwaters to the Lower Reaches of the Yellow River in Future Earth
Scenarios
Abstract
Since the early 21st century, the Yellow River Source Basin (YRSB) has
faced multiple flow disruptions, threatening water security for nearly
one million downstream residents. Efforts such as the Ngoring Reservoir
and Sanjiangyuan Ecological Reserve initially mitigated these issues.
However, global climate change and the decommissioning of the Ngoring
Reservoir have renewed these concerns. This study integrates
multi-source satellite data (altimetry and imaging) and in-situ
measurements (station and field) to simulate runoff in the YRSB from
2000 to 2020 and predict it with the IPCC data from 2021 to 2070 by long
short-term memory (LSTM) model. Calculation results indicate that from
2000-2020, water storage in Lake Gyaring and Lake Ngoring increased by
0.47 billion m³ and 0.65 billion m³, respectively, with soil water
rising by approximately 0.60 billion m³. About 40% of Lake Ngoring’s
water comes from Lake Gyaring, crucial for mitigating extreme events if
ecological integrity is maintained. Simulation runoff in high
temperature is more sensitive to precipitation changes, while runoff in
low temperature is more affected by evapotranspiration. Prediction
results shows that under the most probable future, SSP 370 scenario,
runoff recharge is expected to increase until mid-century but decline
significantly thereafter due to rising evaporation, when the YRSB may be
at risk of breakage.