[G]lobal Decline In Endorheic Basin Water Storages
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https://doi.org/10.1038/s41561-018-0265-7 <-- shared paper
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Endorheic_basin <-- shared Wikipedia page
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“Endorheic (hydrologically landlocked) basins spatially concur with arid/semi-arid climates. Given limited precipitation but high potential evaporation, their water storage is vulnerable to subtle flux perturbations, which are exacerbated by global warming and human activities. Increasing regional evidence suggests a probably recent net decline in endorheic water storage, but this remains unquantified at a global scale. By integrating satellite observations and hydrological modelling, [they] reveal[ed] that during 2002–2016 the global endorheic system experienced a widespread water loss of about 106.3 Gt/yr, attributed to comparable losses in surface water, soil moisture and groundwater. This decadal decline, disparate from water storage fluctuations in exorheic basins, appears less sensitive to El Niño–Southern Oscillation-driven climate variability, which implies a possible response to longer-term climate conditions and human water management. In the mass-conserved hydrosphere, such an endorheic water loss not only exacerbates local water stress, but also imposes excess water on exorheic basins, leading to a potential sea level rise that matches the contribution of nearly half of the land glacier retreat (excluding Greenland and Antarctica). Given these dual ramifications, [they] suggest the necessity for long-term monitoring of water storage variation in the global endorheic system and the inclusion of its net contribution to future sea level budgeting…”
#water #hydrology #hydrography #global #waterresources #waterstorage #Endorheic #Basin #watersecurity #arid #semiarid #rainfall #precipitation #spatialanalysis #spatiotemporal #globalwarming #climatechange #humanimpacts #anthropogenic #regional #remotesensing #GIS #spatial #mapping #earthobservation #surfacewater #groundwater #soilmoisture #exorheic #watermanagement #hydrosphere #waterstress #SLR #sealevelrise #monitoring #waterbudgets
Decoupling Of Surface Water Storage From Precipitation In Global Drylands Due To Anthropogenic Activity
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https://doi.org/10.1038/s44221-024-00367-7 <-- shared paper
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“The availability of surface water in global drylands is essential for both human society and ecosystems. However, the long-term drivers of change in surface water storage, particularly those related to anthropogenic activities, remain unclear. Here [they] use[d] multi-mission remote sensing data to construct monthly time series of water storage changes from 1985 to 2020 for 105,400 lakes and reservoirs in global drylands. An increase of 2.20 km³ per year in surface water storage is found primarily due to the construction of new reservoirs. For lakes and old reservoirs (constructed before 1983), conversely, the trend in storage is minor when aggregated globally, but they dominate surface water storage trends in 91% of individual global dryland basins. Further analysis reveals that long-term storage changes in these water bodies are primarily linked to anthropogenic factors - including human-induced warming and water-management practices - rather than to precipitation changes, as previously thought. These findings reveal a decoupling of surface water storage from precipitation in global drylands, raising concerns about societal and ecosystem sustainability…”
#water #hydrology #hydrography #waterstorage #waterresources #surfacewater #global #drylands #precipitation #rainfall #watersecurity #ecosystems #habitat #publichealth #anthropogenic #GIS #spatial #mapping #remotesensing #earthobservation #spatiotemporal #spatialanalysis #monitoring #geostatistics #engineering #reservoirs #infrastructure #lakes #waterbodies #globalwarming #climatechange #sustainability #planning #baseline

Slaveship Earth: Capitalism’s Secret 500-Year Climate History

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The climate crisis didn’t begin with factories, smokestacks, or fossil fuels. It began with slave ships.
In this sharp and provocative lecture, Jason W. Moore delivers a devastating answer: the problem isn’t “anthropogenic” — made by humans. The problem is capitalogenic — made by capital.

Moore critiques the most dangerous idea of the modern world — the “Man” versus “Nature” binary — and shows how it was born in the Columbian invasions after 1492. He replaces the comforting myth of Spaceship Earth with the far more accurate metaphor: Slaveship Earth. Signifying a world-ecology of power, profit and life built on the capitalist expulsion of most humans from “humanity,” Cheap Nature, and five centuries of violence, appropriation, and frontier-making, Moore traces the long history of climate change before and during the capitalist era.

This is not another story of hopelessness or population panic. It is an ecology of hope. Moore reveals how every major climate shift in the Holocene has been a moment of civilizational crisis and political possibility — from the fall of Rome and the peasant revolts that ended feudalism, to today’s climate crisis. He shows why the Capitalocene today is propelling a crisis of life-making and profit-making at once, and why only collective democratic action can seize the opportunities hidden inside the capitalogenic threat.

In this wide-ranging talk, Moore explains:

• Why “anthropogenic global warming” is neither innocent nor accurate — Britain and the US alone are responsible for more than a third of historical greenhouse gas emissions.

• How sugar plantations, silver mines, and the slaveship — not the steam engine or the Industrial Revolution — created the organizational template for capitalism as a world-ecology and its Cheap Nature projects.

• Why the Anthropocene is an elitist anti-politics machine that hides five centuries of capitalogenic crisis behind the fiction of “humans did it.”

• How climate shifts have repeatedly destabilized ruling classes and opened paths to greater equality for the vast majority.

• Why today’s state shift demands we move beyond Green Arithmetic to an ethic of care, connection, and democracy in the web of life.

This is not a call for green tech or climate austerity. It is a call to end the cheapening of life and labor once and for all — and to build a different world inside the one that is dying.

From a public lecture by Jason W. Moore, “Climate, Capitalism, and Geohistorical Crises, School of Architecture, ETH-Zurich (Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule Zürich), 25 February, 2019.

Jason W. Moore teaches world history at Binghamton University and coordinates the World-Ecology Research Collective. He is the author of Capitalism in the Web of Life and, with Raj Patel, A History of the World in Seven Cheap Things. Key ideas for this lecture are drawn from Moore’s books and essays, most freely available on his website jasonwmoore.com, including “The Capitalocene” essays, “Opiates of the Environmentalists,” and “Our Capitalogenic World.”

Slaveship Earth: Capitalism’s Secret 500-Year Climate History

YouTube
#Anthropogenic #noise significantly alters #bird behavior and physiology globally, with distinct negative impacts on fitness and reproduction that vary by species traits but are largely predictable and reversible.
#Ecology #Environmental #Conservation #Ornithology #sflorg
https://www.sflorg.com/2026/02/eco02142601.html
Noise pollution is affecting birds’ reproduction, stress levels and more. The good news is we can fix it.

Since 1970, bird populations have declined at a staggering rate