The terrestrial water cycle links the soil and atmosphere moisture reservoirs through four fluxes: precipitation, evaporation, runoff, and atmospheric moisture convergence (net import of water vapor to balance runoff). Each of these processes is essential for sustaining human and ecosystem well-being. Predicting how the water cycle responds to changes in vegetation cover remains a challenge. Recently, changes in plant transpiration across the Amazon basin were shown to be associated disproportionately with changes in rainfall, suggesting that even small declines in transpiration (e.g., from deforestation) would lead to much larger declines in rainfall. Here, constraining these findings by the law of mass conservation, we show that in a suff...
An ecosystem service is a benefit derived by humanity that can be traced back to an ecological proce...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Wiley via the DOI in thi...
Land use changes can affect many dimensions of the hydrological cycle which in turn affect the provi...
The terrestrial water cycle links the soil and atmosphere moisture reservoirs through four fluxes: p...
The terrestrial water cycle links the soil and atmosphere moisture reservoirs through four fluxes: p...
The Amazon forest enhances precipitation levels regionally as trees take up water from the soil and ...
The Amazon is hypothesized to reach an irreversible 'tipping point' when deforestation slows the hyd...
The Amazon moisture recycling system has been widely examined because it is fundamental to maintain ...
Forests are important to regulate water-climate relationships, providing important ecosystem service...
Tree transpiration in the Amazon may enhance rainfall for downwind forests. Until now it has been un...
Land use and land cover change in the Amazon results in the loss and degradation of ecosystem servic...
The absorption of atmospheric water directly into leaves enables plants to alleviate the water stres...
Evapotranspiration (E) in the Amazon connects forest function and regional climate via its role in p...
An ecosystem service is a benefit derived by humanity that can be traced back to an ecological proce...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Wiley via the DOI in thi...
Land use changes can affect many dimensions of the hydrological cycle which in turn affect the provi...
The terrestrial water cycle links the soil and atmosphere moisture reservoirs through four fluxes: p...
The terrestrial water cycle links the soil and atmosphere moisture reservoirs through four fluxes: p...
The Amazon forest enhances precipitation levels regionally as trees take up water from the soil and ...
The Amazon is hypothesized to reach an irreversible 'tipping point' when deforestation slows the hyd...
The Amazon moisture recycling system has been widely examined because it is fundamental to maintain ...
Forests are important to regulate water-climate relationships, providing important ecosystem service...
Tree transpiration in the Amazon may enhance rainfall for downwind forests. Until now it has been un...
Land use and land cover change in the Amazon results in the loss and degradation of ecosystem servic...
The absorption of atmospheric water directly into leaves enables plants to alleviate the water stres...
Evapotranspiration (E) in the Amazon connects forest function and regional climate via its role in p...
An ecosystem service is a benefit derived by humanity that can be traced back to an ecological proce...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Wiley via the DOI in thi...
Land use changes can affect many dimensions of the hydrological cycle which in turn affect the provi...