# A Climate Data Record (CDR) for the global terrestrial water budget: 1984–2010

Closing the terrestrial water budget is necessary to provide consistent estimates of budget components for understanding water resources and changes over time. Given the lack of in situ observations of budget components at anything but local scale, merging information from multiple data sources (e.g., in situ observation, satellite remote sensing, land surface model, and reanalysis) through data assimilation techniques that optimize the estimation of fluxes is a promising approach. Conditioned on the current limited data availability, a systematic method is developed to optimally combine multiple available data sources for precipitation (inline-formulaP), evapotranspiration (ET), runoff (inline-formulaR), and the total water storage change (TWSC) at 0.5inline-formula spatial resolution globally and to obtain water budget closure (i.e., to enforce inline-formula $M4inlinescrollmathmlP-\text{ET}-R-\text{TWSC}=$ 109pt11ptsvg-formulamathimgf3818d03e86a691b99824f893d9ba29d hess-22-241-2018-ie00001.svg109pt11pthess-22-241-2018-ie00001.png  0) through a constrained Kalman filter (CKF) data assimilation technique under the assumption that the deviation from the ensemble mean of all data sources for the same budget variable is used as a proxy of the uncertainty in individual water budget variables. The resulting long-term (1984–2010), monthly 0.5inline-formula resolution global terrestrial water cycle Climate Data Record (CDR) data set is developed under the auspices of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) Earth System Data Records (ESDRs) program. This data set serves to bridge the gap between sparsely gauged regions and the regions with sufficient in situ observations in investigating the temporal and spatial variability in the terrestrial hydrology at multiple scales. The CDR created in this study is validated against in situ measurements like river discharge from the Global Runoff Data Centre (GRDC) and the United States Geological Survey (USGS), and ET from FLUXNET. The data set is shown to be reliable and can serve the scientific community in understanding historical climate variability in water cycle fluxes and stores, benchmarking the current climate, and validating models.

### Zitieren

Zitierform:

Zhang, Yu / Pan, Ming / Sheffield, Justin / et al: A Climate Data Record (CDR) for the global terrestrial water budget: 1984–2010. 2018. Copernicus Publications.

### Zugriffsstatistik

Gesamt:
Volltextzugriffe: