Publication | Open Access
Moisture Supply From the Western Ghats Forests to Water Deficit East Coast of India
48
Citations
44
References
2018
Year
EngineeringForest HydrologyForestryMountainous Western CoastLand DegradationBiodiversity Hot SpotEarth ScienceSocial SciencesWater AvailabilityVegetation-atmosphere InteractionsForest MeteorologyDrought ForecastingArid EnvironmentTamil NaduClimate ChangeLandscape ProcessesHydrometeorologyGeographyHydrologyDeforestationClimate DynamicsClimatic ImpactClimatologyWater ResourcesDroughtWestern Ghats ForestsDrylandsMoisture Supply
Abstract The mountainous western coast of India, known as the Western Ghats, is considered to be a biodiversity hot spot, but it is under a constant threat due to human activities. The region is characterized by high orographic monsoon precipitation resulting in dense vegetation cover. Feedback of such a dense vegetation on the southwest monsoon rainfall is not yet explored. Here we perform regional climate simulations with the Weather Research and Forecasting model and find that evapotranspiration from the vegetation of Western Ghats contributes 25–40% of the southwest monsoon rainfall over the water‐deficit state of Tamil Nadu. This contribution reaches 50% during deficit monsoon years or dry spells within a season. Our findings suggest that recent deforestation in this area will affect not only the biodiversity of the region but also the water availability over Peninsular India, which is already impacted by water scarcity.
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