Illuminating Water Cycle Modifications
Illuminating Water Cycle Modifications
Illuminating Water Cycle Modifications
Citation: Abstract Fresh water—the bloodstream of the biosphere—is at the center of the planetary drama of the
Gleeson, T., Wang‐Erlandsson, L.,
Porkka, M., Zipper, S. C., Jaramillo, F.,
Anthropocene. Water fluxes and stores regulate the Earth's climate and are essential for thriving aquatic
Gerten, D., et al (2020). Illuminating and terrestrial ecosystems, as well as water, food, and energy security. But the water cycle is also being
water cycle modifications and Earth modified by humans at an unprecedented scale and rate. A holistic understanding of freshwater's role for
system resilience in the Anthropocene.
Water Resources Research, 56,
Earth system resilience and the detection and monitoring of anthropogenic water cycle modifications across
e2019WR024957. https://doi.org/ scales is urgent, yet existing methods and frameworks are not well suited for this. In this paper we
10.1029/2019WR024957 highlight four core Earth system functions of water (hydroclimatic regulation, hydroecological regulation,
storage, and transport) and key related processes. Building on systems and resilience theory, we review the
Received 11 MAR 2019
Accepted 30 DEC 2019
evidence of regional‐scale regime shifts and disruptions of the Earth system functions of water. We then
Accepted article online 4 JAN 2020 propose a framework for detecting, monitoring, and establishing safe limits to water cycle modifications and
identify four possible spatially explicit methods for their quantification. In sum, this paper presents an
ambitious scientific and policy grand challenge that could substantially improve our understanding of the
role of water in the Earth system and cross‐scale management of water cycle modifications that would
be a complementary approach to existing water management tools.
Plain language summary Freshwater is crucially important for all life on Earth. There is
abundant research and evidence on how different processes within the water cycle regulate climate and
support ecosystems, and by extension, human societies. Humans are also a major force disturbing those
processes and modifying the water cycle. These modifications include, for instance, surface water
withdrawals, groundwater pumping, deforestation and other land cover change, and ice melt due to
warming climate. As most previous research on human–water interactions focuses on understanding
systems at smaller scales, such as a watershed or a nation, comprehensive understanding of what human
modifications of the water cycle mean for the stability of the planet is still lacking. In this paper we propose a
©2020. American Geophysical Union. new framework for analysing and establishing limits to a variety of human modifications of the water cycle,
All Rights Reserved.
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to ensure that the stability of the Earth would not be compromised. We see this as an important and urgent
scientific challenge that has the potential to substantially improve our understanding of the functioning
of the Earth system and to inform local and global policy toward a more sustainable future.
1. Why is a Framework for Examining the Role of Water Cycle Modifications for
Earth System Resilience Necessary?
Human pressure on fundamental planetary processes are pushing the Earth out of the Holocene geological
epoch, the only period in Earth's history known to be capable of supporting sedentary, complex human civi-
lisation. In this newly human shaped Anthropocene, the scale and magnitude of human drivers risk trigger
critical transitions that jeopardize the habitability of Earth for human society (Barnosky et al., 2012; Steffen
et al., 2018). Fresh water—the bloodstream of the biosphere—is at the center of this planetary drama: The
water cycle is not only essential for myriad Earth system processes, interactions, and feedbacks, but it is also
subject to anthropogenic manipulation at the global scale. Water, food, and energy security and sustainabil-
ity depend on various water stores and fluxes that have been and are being modified by many and diverse
processes, interactions, and feedbacks of global change in the Anthropocene.
Water flows regulate the Earth's climate system through mediation of the energy, carbon, and water
balances and are a prerequisite for thriving aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems. Among others, soil
moisture affects the Earth's albedo through supporting vegetation and contributing to cloud
formation, carbon sequestration through regulation of biomass production, and moisture feedback on
precipitation. Rivers transport half of the carbon sequestered by land to water bodies and respire half
into the atmosphere (Biddanda, 2017). Critical ecosystem services require 90% of global evapotranspira-
tion to function (Rockström et al., 1999), while streamflow sustains aquatic ecosystem functioning
(Smakhtin 2004).
Holistically understanding, evaluating, and maintaining the water cycle's role for a resilient Earth system is
extremely challenging and urgent in the Anthropocene, as the societal complexities interlock with the com-
plex dynamics of the Earth system. Globally distributed and interconnected human activities have become
the dominant force of modifications to the water cycle and already created local‐ to regional‐scale water‐
mediated regime shifts. Research shows anthropogenic forcing to dominate changing river flows worldwide
(Shiklomanov & Rodda, 2003), groundwater depletion (Aeschbach‐Hertig & Gleeson, 2012; Bierkens &
Wada, 2019), the partitioning of water on land (Jaramillo & Destouni, 2015a), as well as the spatial patterns
and seasonal timing of evapotranspiration over continents (Gordon et al., 2005; Sterling et al., 2012). These
water cycle modifications have had knock‐on effects on critical Earth system functioning through modifica-
tion of atmospheric moisture feedbacks (Wang‐Erlandsson et al., 2018), tropical forest resilience (Hirota
et al., 2011; Zemp et al., 2017; Staal et al., 2018), monsoon systems, and sea level (Wada et al., 2012). At
the same time, the human impact on the water cycle is more internationally connected than ever, through
flows of people, commodities, finance, technology, and information that enable emerging impacts on the
water cycle through virtual water flows (Dalin et al., 2017; Hoekstra & Mekonnen, 2012; Oki et al., 2017;
Porkka et al., 2012), land grabs (Rulli et al., 2013), and forest transition displacements (Meyfroidt
et al., 2010).
The spatial heterogeneity and distribution of the water cycle, however, mean that water stores and fluxes are
often analysed at local to regional scales of 10 to 1,000 s of km2 (Archfield et al., 2015; Brown et al., 2015;
Medema et al., 2008; Savenije et al., 2014). A textbook case of the need for a continental‐to‐global, rather
than local‐to‐regional, perspective is the global interconnectedness between the Amazon Forest and the
water cycle. Greenhouse gas emissions worldwide drive climate change that increases the frequency and
severity of drought and fire in the Amazon (Aragão et al., 2018; Duffy et al., 2015), while global demand
for agricultural products such as soybean and financial investments spur forest clearing (Barona et al.,
2010; Galaz et al., 2018; Nepstad et al., 1994). Together, deforestation and climate change alter the regional
rainfall patterns and shift the South American monsoon system and reverberate to impact on precipitation
in the midlatitudes through teleconnections (D'Almeida et al., 2007; Lawrence and Vandecar, 2014; Nobre,
2014; Spera et al., 2016, Swann et al., 2015). Moreover, repeated severe droughts may ultimately undermine
the Amazon forest's role as a global net carbon sink (Yang et al., 2018).
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The scientific and ethical grand challenge of examining water cycle modifications for Earth system resilience
is deeply connected to numerous research questions at the heart of current research frontiers and questions
in hydrology: How do we understand and manage the interactions, dynamics, and connectivities in the
global water system? (Alcamo et al., 2008; Bierkens et al., 2015; Fan et al., 2019; Vörösmarty et al., 2015;
Wood et al., 2011). How do we consider humans as endogenous to the water system in the relatively newly
emerging discipline of socio‐hydrology? (Di Baldassarre et al., 2013.; Brown et al., 2015; Lund, 2015;
Montanari et al., 2013; Sivapalan et al., 2012, 2014; Vogel et al., 2015; Wagener et al., 2010). How do we man-
age trade‐offs between global development considered in the sustainable development goals (Bhaduri et al.,
2016) and increasing pressure on the Earth system functioning of the global water cycle? How do existing
water management and governance mechanisms and institutions respond to and influence global water
cycling? How do interactions and feedbacks with the food and energy sectors impact the water cycle across
scales? (Cai et al., 2018). Examining global water cycle modifications is a logical complement to these
research challenges. To be able to navigate the planetary‐scale dynamics of the water cycle and make
connections to these other research questions, we first need to understand the following:
• What water‐related changes may lead to supraregional or global tipping points—or more gradual yet
equally detrimental transitions—related to water and Earth system functions?
• To what water‐related changes, and in what regions, is the Earth system particularly vulnerable?
• How do local changes in stores and fluxes of water impact regional and global processes, and how do
regional and global changes impact local processes?
In addition to these scientific questions, ideally, a framework should also be developed that recognizes all
members of the global community as stakeholders of the global water cycle as a “global commons” and
provides knowledge of globally distributed and aggregated limits to various water cycle modifications
beyond which we may push the Earth system state into uncharted territory in terms of habitability for
human civilisations.
Our objective is twofold: providing a planetary‐scale overview of water's role for maintaining Earth system
functions and developing a framework for monitoring, detecting, and potentially acting on water cycle mod-
ifications. This work is based on multiple workshops, working groups, and intense collaboration and debate.
Throughout, we focus on Earth system resilience using a series of concepts introduced in section 2 (dynamic
systems, resilience theory, Earth system science, and the planetary boundary framework). Many manu-
scripts and textbooks have described the components and interactions of the stores and fluxes of the water
cycle, but few (Falkenmark et al., 2019; Rockström et al., 2014) have highlighted the global water cycle as
a dynamic, resilient system as we do in section 2. We then synthesize the functional role of water in the
broader Earth system (section 3) and the evidence of regional regime shifts and disruptions of the Earth
system functions of water (section 4). Finally, we propose a framework for defining global water cycle
modifications using the planetary boundary framework (section 5) and conclude with a call to join us in this
grand challenge (section 6). In the future, the methods for monitoring and detecting water cycle modifica-
tions could possibly be modified or adapted to examine other issues such as water scarcity, security, or virtual
water. Herein “water” refers to terrestrial freshwater.
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In general, regime shifts of a social–ecological system can occur through either a controlling parameter (such
as rainfall) crossing a critical threshold leading to a “tipping” into a new state with internally stabilizing
feedback processes or collapse through gradual change (Falkenmark et al., 2019). Regime shift through
critical thresholds results in a state change that may be difficult or impossible to reverse due to the triggering
of reinforcing positive feedbacks, whereas a regime shift through linear collapse of internal features or
subsystems refers to a gradual system change that does not necessarily introduce significant differences in
system feedbacks. Regime shift through threshold effects and reinforcing feedbacks can be illustrated
through deforestation in the Amazon: Loss in moisture supply leads to rainfall reduction, which leads to for-
est loss below certain rainfall threshold, thus further rainfall reduction associated with increased risk of fire
and further forest loss (Zemp et al., 2017). To restore the rainforest is more difficult because it involves hys-
teresis behavior enforced by internal feedbacks; in the Amazon, for example, counteracting self‐amplifying
feedbacks to restore a forested state requires higher rainfall levels than the threshold that originally induced
forest loss. On the other hand, an example of linear collapse can be illustrated through river depletion,
wherein principle, water levels can be restored by reversing the processes that led to their depletion
(although related social–ecological systems such as fishing communities may exhibit hysteretic effects). To
our best knowledge, there is no study comprehensively investigating whether human modifications of the
water cycle have led, could be leading, or will lead to planetary‐scale regime shifts in the Earth system.
The term resilience was originally introduced to refer to the capacity of a system to absorb or withstand dis-
turbance that may precipitate a regime shift. This definition of resilience is sometimes referred to as persis-
tence resilience; it draws originally from system dynamics understanding and is supported by a range of
observation‐based ecosystem studies (e.g., Holling, 1973; Scheffer et al., 2001; Walker et al., 2004).
Persistence resilience can be used to describe all the examples of regime shifts described above and deals pri-
marily with an agent‐free environment (Donges & Barfuss, 2017) and therefore is also of primary relevance
for understanding the biophysical aspects of Earth system resilience. Broader aspects of resilience of social–
ecological systems (e.g., Folke et al., 2004; Holling, 1973; Holling & Gunderson, 2002) include the capacity of
a system to adapt to changes and transform into a new desirable state. Complex interlinked social–ecological
systems may undergo cycles of adaptation at different hierarchical levels, which are nested in the panarchy
framework (Holling and Gundersson, 2002). At the global scale and highest level, social–ecological system
dynamics have been addressed using world‐system analysis (Chase‐Dunn & Hall, 1997; Denemark et al.,
2000; Gotts, 2007; Hall, 2000; Wallerstein, 1974) that to varying extent address socioeconomic feedbacks
equally with biophysical feedbacks. The branch of Earth system science focusing on Earth system resilience
to anthropogenic pressure that does not consider socioeconomic feedbacks as endogenous includes studies
of tipping elements in the Earth system (Lenton et al., 2008; Steffen et al., 2018) and the planetary boundary
framework (Rockström et al., 2009a, 2009b; Steffen, Richardson, et. al., 2015).
Specifically, this paper focuses on the water cycle's essential role for Earth system resilience, which is the
Earth system's ability to absorb or withstand perturbations and other stressors while essentially maintaining
its structure and functions (see section 3). We recognize the three ways in which water interacts with
resilience (Falkenmark et al., 2019; Rockström et al., 2014): (i) as a “source” of resilience, that is, through
the generation of ecosystem services and functions in both terrestrial and aquatic systems; (ii) as a “victim”
of change, for example, by being subject to land use change and pollution pressure; and (iii) as an “agent” of
change, for example, by driving social shocks or vegetation change through modifications in the temporal or
spatial distribution in the water cycle. By undermining resilience of local–regional systems, human
modifications of the water cycle have already pushed many of them beyond collapse, such as through
salinization, desertification, flow regulation, and eutrophication (see section 4 for evidence of water‐related
regime shifts).
In the Anthropocene, continued human pressure may now accumulate water cycle modifications to threats
of planetary‐scale tipping through four general pathways (Barnosky et al., 2012; Lenton et al., 2008; Rocha
et al., 2018; Steffen et al., 2018): (1) extensive local‐scale changes that trigger critical transitions over a large
area; (2) global forcing that trigger local changes; (3) synergy, feedbacks, and cross‐scale interactions
through complex networks; and (4) tipping of major subsystems of the Earth system. The categorization
of these pathways is idealized, and multiple mechanisms may concur in reality. The first pathway is sup-
ported by empirical patch‐area and landscape‐scale studies. For example, crossing certain thresholds of habi-
tat loss or fragmentation may trigger abrupt, landscape‐wide species extinction (Pardini et al., 2010). At
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Earth system scale, it has been suggested that a 50% transformation of the Earth's terrestrial ecosystems may
cause global‐scale tipping to occur (Noss et al., 2012) and, for example, that 85% of tropical and boreal forests
need to remain in order to safeguard the functioning of the Earth system (Rockström et al., 2009a, 2009b;
Steffen, Richardson, et al., 2015). The second pathway can be illustrated by the role of Amazon as carbon
sink, which if reverted to carbon source through drought‐induced forest loss, may cause a global‐scale for-
cing that triggers local‐scale changes in the water cycle. The third pathway is supported by network analyses
that show that regime shifts may interact through cascades and cross‐scale interactions (e.g., Rocha et al.,
2018). Dynamic and complex interactions and cascades have also raised the concern that processes that were
previously thought to be confined to regional concern may in fact have planetary resilience implications
(Rocha et al., 2018; Lenton et al., 2008, Steffen et al., 2018). Finally, the fourth pathway suggests that human
pressure on tipping elements, which is the key subsystems of the Earth at subcontinental scale that can be
switched into a different state following minor perturbations (Lenton et al., 2008), may have the ability to
destabilize the current planetary state (Steffen et al., 2018).
We seek to understand the role of water cycle modifications for Earth system dynamics through the lens of
the planetary boundary framework (section 5), as it is to date the most systematic effort for comprehensively
addressing the question “What are the non‐negotiable planetary preconditions that humanity needs to
respect in order to avoid the risk of deleterious or even catastrophic environmental change at continental
to global scales?” (Rockström et al., 2009b). Planetary boundaries are defined as biogeophysical boundaries
for the processes and systems, which together regulate the state of the Earth system; the framework is not to
be confused with the “planetary boundary layer” used in in atmospheric science (Vilà‐Guerau de Arellan
et al., 2015). The planetary boundary framework is based on (i) identifying relevant biogeochemical pro-
cesses that regulate the stability of the Earth system and (ii) determining the limit of human perturbation
of these critical processes. Crossing any of the planetary boundaries could destabilize essential Earth system
processes (Rockström et al., 2009a, 2009b; Steffen, Richardson, et al., 2015) and move the Earth away from
Holocene conditions during which human societies developed and proliferated. Nine planetary boundary
processes and systems have been identified (Rockström et al., 2009a, 2009b). For each boundary
process/system, the planetary boundary should be defined based on the relationship between a control vari-
able (a quantifiable, possibly spatially distributed biophysical indicator of main processes controlling the
Earth system process in question, over which humans can exert some influence) and a response variable
(an aspect of the Earth system that defines Earth's stable Holocene‐like conditions and is affected by a
change in the control variable), though several planetary boundaries do not yet have clearly defined control
and/or response variables. It is important to note that the planetary boundary framework is based on
biophysical resilience (the ability of a system to absorb or withstand disturbance and possibly ecosystems'
ability to adapt to changing conditions) rather than the more socioecological resilience that includes societal
adaptation, transformation, and panarchy.
The current planetary boundary for human freshwater use is based on a global sum of the average annual
surface water flow in rivers relative to environmental flow requirements. Even if refined by complementary
subglobal boundaries representing rivers' environmental flow requirements (Gerten et al., 2013; Steffen,
Richardson, et al., 2015), this provisional planetary boundary and its current status have been critiqued
(Heistermann, 2017; Jaramillo & Destouni, 2015b; Gleeson et al., 2019), as it does not reflect all types of
human interference with the complex global water cycle and Earth system (Figure 1). Gleeson et al.
(2019) suggest that a water planetary boundary would be more scientifically robust and more useful in
decision‐making frameworks if it was redesigned to consider more specifically how climate and living eco-
systems respond to changes in the different forms of water on Earth: atmospheric water, soil moisture,
groundwater and frozen water, as well as surface water. In section 5 we suggest how the planetary boundary
framework can be used to better understand how water cycle modifications could potentially be impacting
Earth system resilience, based on our following review.
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Figure 1. (a) The core functions of water in the Earth system. The five stores of the freshwater hydrosphere (colored circles in center), major components of the
Earth system (outer ring), and detailed Earth system components underlying the different planetary boundaries (inner gray ring) are shown. The arrows
denote processes linking the water stores and the Earth system components, color coded by water function (hydroclimate, hydroecology, storage, and transport).
Since we focus on the near‐surface hydrosphere, we consider land (part of the lithosphere) and ocean (part of the hydrosphere) as important related Earth system
components. The interaction between stores are shown schematically but are not the focus since these are described in many hydrology textbooks.
This diagram highlights the complex interactions between water stores and Earth system components more comprehensively than (b) common representations
of the water cycle (modified from Oki & Kanae, 2006). Freshwater use is one of the current planetary boundaries yet affecting only a small component of (b) the
hydrosphere and only representing a single function of water in the Earth system (see inset small circle and red text). Note that in figures, hydroclimatic and
hydroecological regulation are shortened to hydroclimate and hydroecology. P, precipitation; ET, evapotranspiration.
(Rockström et al., 2014), seminal hydrology evaluations, reports, and textbooks (Dingman, 2002; National
Research Council, 1991; Oki & Kanae, 2006; Tang & Oki, 2016; UNESCO, 1978) here we highlight four
core Earth system functions of water: (1) hydroclimatic regulation, (2) hydroecological regulation, (3)
storage, and (4) transport. These Earth system functions of water are different from watershed functions
(Black, 1997; Wagener et al., 2007), which focus on hydrologic functions generally at smaller scales, not
explicitly considering water in the broader Earth system. The Earth system functions of water are also
different to water functions for social–ecological resilience in the Anthropocene (Falkenmark et al., 2019)
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that distinguish green and blue water functions for social–ecological resilience, whereas we focus on the
functions of water explicitly for Earth system stability, independent of green or blue origin. Inevitably, this
description and related citations are nonexhaustive and serve primarily to outline a scientific foundation
examining global water cycle modifications and for the water planetary boundary.
3.3. Storage
Freshwater storage in groundwater, lakes, wetlands, reservoirs, and frozen water primarily interacts with
the Earth system as a control over sea level. Globally, freshwater storage is dominated by frozen water in
the polar ice sheets (Gleick, 2000). Mass loss due to ice melt is widespread and accelerating in both the
Antarctic and Greenland ice sheets (Velicogna et al., 2014), and melt from the ice sheets increases the total
volume of water in the oceans leading to sea level rise, exacerbated by thermal expansion of the oceans
caused by global warming (Abraham et al., 2013). Groundwater is the second largest store of freshwater,
and reductions in global groundwater storage due to groundwater pumping are a secondary contributor to
global sea level (Wada et al., 2016), though the magnitude of this flux is dwarfed by the impacts of ice
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melting (Reager et al., 2016). Increased storage in surface reservoirs plays only a minor role in total global
water volume storage, yet it has the capacity to substantially distort river flow regimes, including the drying
up of streams, and to reduce hydrologic connectivity (Grill et al., 2019). Loss of storage due to changes in
lakes and wetlands, groundwater depletion, or reduced snowpack and/or mountain glaciers may also impact
the Earth system via locally important alterations to the timing, magnitude, and temperature of streamflow
(Dickerson‐Lange & Mitchell, 2014; Gleeson & Richter, 2018; Immerzeel et al., 2010; Watson et al., 2014),
which can have cascading effects on ecosystems and society (Xu et al., 2009).
3.4. Transport
The spatial and temporal dynamics of water are fundamental for moving, displacing, and diluting sediment
and dissolved constituents including nutrients on the surface or within soils (Earle et al., 2015). Chemical
weathering, mineral soil leaching, and transport of artificial fertilizers and chemicals into adjacent rivers,
lakes and streams, and finally into the oceans (Earle et al., 2015; McGuire & McDonnell, 2006) impact water
quality and biodiversity (Smith & Schindler, 2009). Water can either stabilize or destabilize landscapes (e.g.,
flooding) (Earle et al., 2015; Summerfield, 2005, 2014). Deposition of soil by water flux within and between
these shape determine the function and geological shape of landscapes (Ellis et al., 2002; Wiens et al., 2005).
Water and ice are responsible for a large amount of sediment transport on the surface of the Earth and are
important in many geological processes such as rock and landform formation and erosion (Earle et al., 2015;
Summerfield, 2005, 2014). Dilution of minerals and nutrients in soil additionally controls soil and above-
ground biome characteristic (Ellis et al., 2002; Tölgyessy, 1993; Wiens et al., 2005).
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deficit over 11 months (Huang et al., 2015). Small changes in precipitation regimes are also known to have
induced structural changes in wetland ecosystems, and abrupt ecological transitions in coastal wetlands are
expected to expand to new coastal wetlands as hydroclimatic changes step up in the future (Osland
et al., 2016).
Monsoons are large‐scale seasonal reversals of atmospheric circulation with threshold behavior in terms of
variability regime, atmospheric moisture transport, and spatial distribution (Lenton et al., 2008). Shifts in
monsoon systems can have abrupt consequences at the continental scale (Lenton et al., 2008). For example,
the West African monsoon shift had a major influence on the stable states between the Green Sahara regime
(11,000–5,000 years ago) and the current Desert Sahara regime (Tierney et al., 2017; Yu et al., 2015). The
rainy phase of monsoons brings large amounts of precipitation, turning landscapes green and replenishing
rivers and aquifers, and is crucially important for agriculture and ecosystems. While large‐scale tipping
behavior of monsoon systems are primarily driven by global climate and ocean processes, regional land sur-
face processes mediated by the water cycle are also one of several important factors that are able to influence
monsoon dynamics. Studies have, for example, shown that increased evapotranspiration (i.e., latent heat)
over irrigated land areas can decrease the land–ocean pressure gradient and thereby delay the Indian sum-
mer monsoon onset (e.g., Tuinenburg, 2013). In the Sahel, land degradation that reduces evapotranspiration
and increases the north–south temperature gradient appears to enhance the African easterly jet, which
drives moisture westward out of the region, in opposition to the southwesterly West African monsoon circu-
lation (Hagos et al., 2014). Land feedback effects extend to tropics, and, for example, Nogherotto et al. (2013)
showed that decreased evapotranspiration over deforested areas in the Congo has a seasonal influence on
the strength of the west and south‐equatorial African monsoon. Land–ocean gradient is also important in
the South American monsoon system: Boers et al. (2017) showed that deforestation can induce a tipping
point in the South American monsoon when latent heat release is no longer sufficient to maintain a positive
feedback that enhances atmospheric inflow from the Atlantic, which would cause significant precipitation
decline in the western Amazon and regions further downstream.
4.2. Soil Moisture
Soil moisture mediates terrestrial ecosystem transitions and desertification processes. Decrease in soil moist-
ure caused by vegetation loss, erosion, and compaction creates a self‐reinforcing feedback that prevents the
re‐establishment of plants (e.g., Karssenberg et al., 2017; Whitford et al., 2006) or causes shifts in ecosystem
species composition (Loheide & Gorelick, 2007). Soil moisture‐related land degradation has the potential for
cascading and teleconnected impacts on the Earth's energy balance through, for example, large‐scale albedo
change and desert dust that follows wind beyond continents with effects on both climate systems and
nutrient balance in distant regions (Bestelmeyer et al., 2015; Geist & Lambin, 2004). Also, deficits in soil
moisture and changes in terrestrial water storage can severely diminish the primary production and carbon
sequestration capacity of the terrestrial biosphere (Humphrey et al., 2018). Regions with important soil
carbon storage and sequestration are the Northern Hemisphere that has the largest soil organic carbon
stocks and the tropics that have seen the largest decrease in carbon stocks due to agricultural expansion,
respectively (Cherlet et al., 2018).
4.3. Surface Water
While aquatic ecosystems can be negatively impacted by changes in streamflow (Carlisle et al., 2017; Gido
et al., 2010; Perkin et al., 2017; Vörösmarty et al., 2010), there is no clear evidence or mechanism by which
local‐ or basin‐scale changes in aquatic biosphere integrity could scale up to have a planetary impact.
However, one local‐scale tipping point related to aquatic ecosystems is the transition of streams from
perennial to intermittent, which can lead to a reorganization of local food webs (Bogan & Lytle, 2011).
This transition is likely to be driven by changes in the groundwater storage function of water, which acts
as a buffer against short‐term hydroclimatic variability by providing a stable supply of baseflow to streams.
A second local‐scale hydroecological tipping point that has been identified in the literature is food web
collapse associated with eutrophication and salinization. For the perennial–ephemeral and oligotrophic–
eutrophic regime shifts, evidence of tipping points to eutrophic states (Wang & Temmerman, 2013) or even
lake disappearance by water use‐induced drying exist in several regions around the world, the most well
known being the Aral Sea (Shibuo et al., 2007). We are not aware of studies that look beyond an individual
body of water to trigger widespread shifts in Earth system function. Finally, various species‐ to ecosystem‐
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level effects, in particular for migratory species, have been documented in river ecosystems due to reductions
in hydrologic connectivity (Pringle, 2003) caused by the global proliferation of anthropogenic dam and bar-
rier construction (Grill et al., 2019).
Wetland ecosystems are rich in water‐dependent biodiversity and play a multifaceted role for many
Earth system processes, including high rates of evapotranspiration and groundwater recharge, temporary
water storage, and sediment exchange. Large wetland complexes located downstream of streams and riv-
ers may experience stress‐induced tipping points due to variations in their hydrological characteristics.
Also, coastal wetlands with mangrove ecosystems under such stress can experience reductions in their
mangrove development and extensive mangrove mortality (Jimenez et al., 1985; Smith, 1992; Twilley
& Rivera‐Monroy, 2005); reductions of freshwater inputs to coastal wetlands or hydrological modifica-
tion of their natural flows and connectivity due to reservoirs have already resulted in massive mangrove
mortality episodes involving hypersalinity conditions in several wetlands around the world from which
the wetlands have not been able to completely recover (Barreto, 2008; Cintron et al., 1978; Jaramillo
et al., 2018; Jimenez et al., 1985).
Finally, surface water flows can affect Earth system processes due to their natural freshwater, sediment, and
nutrient delivery to coastal zones and the ocean. Reductions in these flows, due to either climate or anthro-
pogenic impacts including sediment trapping in reservoirs, may shift the balance between aggradation and
erosion rates of large river deltas leading to land loss and cascading effects in marine ecosystems (Syvitski
et al., 2009; Tessler et al., 2018), including their ability to sequester carbon (Duarte et al., 2004). Altered flows
can potentially affect global ocean circulation systems through changes in salinity and temperature; for
example, changes in Arctic runoff may affect Arctic ocean stratification, circulation, and ice cover
(Nummelin et al., 2016) with implications for global oceanic circulation, including the Atlantic overturning
meridional circulation and thermohaline circulation.
4.4. Groundwater
Several potential groundwater‐related tipping points are associated with the storage function of ground-
water. Most critical for aquatic ecosystems is the role of groundwater as a stable supply of baseflow, and
therefore a key tipping point is when a stream transitions from perennial to intermittent (Bogan & Lytle,
2011) due to groundwater depletion (see section 4.3). However, groundwater‐related tipping points are also
present for terrestrial groundwater‐dependent ecosystems. Groundwater within or near the root zone pro-
vides a stable supply of water, particularly during drought, for many natural and agricultural crops via capil-
lary rise and direct groundwater uptake (Booth et al., 2016; Brown et al., 2011; Eamus et al., 2015; Rohde
et al., 2017; Zipper et al., 2015, 2017). Numerous examples exist for critical transitions associated with
regional‐scale impacts of changes in groundwater storage, including groundwater depletion leading to ripar-
ian forest loss (Scott et al., 1999), rising groundwater levels leading to widespread flooding in Argentina
(Houspanossian et al., 2016; Kuppel et al., 2015), and loss of dry forests leading to regional salinization in
Australia (Clarke et al., 2002; George et al., 1999) and the Chaco region of Argentina (Giménez et al.,
2016; Marchesini et al., 2017). Since groundwater is estimated to influence terrestrial ecosystems over 7–
17% of global land area (Fan et al., 2013) and can contribute substantially to evapotranspiration (Lowry &
Loheide, 2010; Soylu et al., 2011, 2014; Yeh & Famiglietti, 2009), it likely constitutes an important compo-
nent of terrestrial evapotranspiration. Thus, important groundwater‐dependent ecosystems that may contri-
bute to regional‐scale shifts could potentially have a proportionally larger influence on Earth system
dynamics. For instance, groundwater is an essential contributor to evapotranspiration in the Amazon basin
(Fan et al., 2017; Miguez‐Macho & Fan, 2012a, 2012b).
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estimated 5 m of sea level rise, which is comparable in magnitude with the total sea level change over the
past ~7,000 years (Fleming et al., 1998). While the loss of Arctic sea ice would have impacts on regional
and global climate due to reduced albedo and is a distinctive marker of alternate states of the Earth system,
its melting sea ice would not impact sea levels (Bathiany et al., 2016; Notz, 2009; Tietsche et al., 2011).
Widespread destabilization of permafrost is another potential tipping point related to frozen water
(Lenton et al., 2008), as permafrost thaw leads to the release of greenhouses gasses, which is a positive feed-
back on climate change and causes increasing sediment transport (Bring et al., 2016; Syvitski, 2002). There is
increasing evidence for abrupt thaw mechanisms at local scales (Chasmer & Hopkinson, 2017; Chipman &
Hu, 2017; Schuur et al., 2015; Zipper et al., 2018), though at global‐scales permafrost thaw is thought to be a
gradual source of carbon of approximately the same magnitude as land use change over the next century
(Schuur et al., 2015).
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Figure 2. (a) Each water store has core water function(s) to maintain Earth system resilience (see section 3), which could help quantify impacts of global water cycle
modifications using (b) the planetary boundary framework. Defining water planetary sub‐boundaries is based on the functional relationship between water
stores and Earth system components. The green zone is the safe operating space; the yellow represents the zone of uncertainty; and the red indicates rising risks of
large‐scale, potentially abrupt and irreversible change (modified from Steffen, Richardson, et al., 2015). (c) Suggestions for key aspects of each of the six
o
sub‐boundaries including possible interim planetary boundary based on 2 C target for late this century in the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate
Change Paris Agreement. The key water function for each sub‐boundary is identified in parentheses (such as hydroecology for surface water).
modifications in the way we propose will necessitate revised models that robustly represent all water stores
and their interactions with other parts of the Earth system or else better coupling with other models.
Input data in two different spatial perspectives may be useful for different water stores (see Weiskel et al.,
2014 for longer discussion and definition): hydrologic units (distributed, open systems represented as pixels
or raster cells) or semi‐closed units (such as watersheds, aquifers, etc.). For example, for the surface water
store, a semi‐closed approach using large basins or river networks might be appropriate, whereas for the
hydroclimatic function of the atmospheric water store (Figure 2), a distributed hydrologic system may be
best since atmospheric water flows across traditional hydrological boundaries such as watershed divides
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(e.g., Bosilovich, & Schubert, 2002; Dirmeyer et al., 2009; Van der Ent et al., 2011; Wang‐Erlandsson et al.,
2018, Chen et al., 2019). Also, for each water store, either hydrologic fluxes or the rate of change of hydro-
logic fluxes may be useful. The rate of change of hydrologic fluxes could be driven by a myriad of global
change processes such as water use, land use, or climate change. An argument for the rate of change
rather than the hydrologic fluxes is that the rate and time scale of environmental change may be more
important to Earth system adaptation than absolute thresholds. Using streamflow as an example, aquatic
ecosystems thrive in regions with a wide range of streamflow rates, but rapid change in streamflow could
be problematic.
5.4. Spatial Analysis of Critical Regions of Global Water Cycle Modifications Using the Planetary
Boundary Framework
To provide more methodology to water cycle modifications and water in the planetary boundary framework,
we propose four new methods of spatial analysis that are based on the spatial distribution of impacts rather
than summing of water fluxes (Figure 3). The current methodology for the freshwater use planetary bound-
ary (or any other methodology that involves summing water fluxes) masks both the spatial and temporal het-
erogeneity of the water cycle and implies that resilience loss caused by water impacts in one place can be
remediated by water abundance in another place. Each of these methods quantify the impact of water cycle
modifications on Earth system resilience using control and response variables on the horizontal and vertical
axis, respectively, and thus may also in the future be useful for setting water planetary sub‐boundaries.
Possible control and response variables for each water store are shown in Figure 2. The first three methods
use input data described in section 5.3, whereas the last method uses previously mapped tipping elements
(Lenton et al., 2008). The first three methods use four different types of data depending on the store: data
in hydrologic units or semi‐closed units, as well as data as fluxes or rate of change of fluxes (section 5.3).
1. The “unweighted approach” calculates the percentage of global land that has crossed a certain threshold
using either the hydrologic fluxes or the hydrologic rate of change and the spatial perspective described in
section 5.3. For example, for the surface water sub‐boundary, the control variable could be the percentage
of global land area of basins (or percentage length of river network to not bias by river length) not meet-
ing environmental flow requirements; the input data would be at the scale of semi‐closed units of basins
or river networks (e.g., de Graaf et al., 2019). This approach would be useful if widespread degradation of
conditions or change of fluxes or stores leads to significant change in the response variable. Another
example is for the hydroclimatic function of atmospheric water store, where the percentage area that
exceed a certain level of evapotranspiration change could be considered. A threshold could theoretically
be set based on, for example, an evapotranspiration decrease, which induces an increase in surface
temperature, reduction in atmospheric water store, and other impacts on local and regional climatic
conditions. Here, we show in Figure 3a all evapotranspiration change that has occurred due to human
induced land use change (e.g., including deforestation‐induced decrease in evapotranspiration and
irrigation‐induced increase in evapotranspiration) as a possible basis for future threshold setting.
2. The “weighted approach” calculates the percentage of the global land area that has crossed a certain
threshold weighted by the importance of that hydrologic unit to the Earth system function (also at a
defined scale of analysis). This “weight” is multiplied with the data used in the “unweighted approach.”
For example, again for the surface water sub‐boundary, the control variable could be the percentage of
global land area of basins not meeting environmental flow requirements weighted by aquatic biodiver-
sity. This approach implies that there are regions where the Earth system function of water for the
sub‐boundary makes a more important contribution to the response variable. Another example is for
the hydroclimatic function of atmospheric water store, where, for example, evapotranspiration change
that has higher chance to influence downwind precipitation over land can be given a higher weight.
Evapotranspiration changes at locations where a high percentage of evapotranspiration returns as
precipitation over land also have higher changes to impact terrestrial rainfall, than places where the
majority of evapotranspiration becomes oceanic precipitation. Thus, Figure 3b illustrates the evapotran-
spiration recycling ratio, the percentage of evapotranspiration that returns as precipitation over land, as a
possible “weight.”
3. The “keystone region approach” identifies regions where certain water stores are disproportionately
important to specific Earth system components. The concept of keystone regions is inspired by the con-
cept of “keystone species,” a species that produces a major impact on their ecosystem and are considered
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Figure 3. Alternative approaches for defining planetary boundary control and response variables (graphs on left hand side) using spatial analysis of critical regions
of global water cycle modifications. Illustrative example using the hydroclimatic function of the atmospheric water store (maps on right hand side). The
maps on the right side (a,b) are from Wang‐Erlandsson et al., 2018 (based on modeled and reanalysis data over the period 2000–2013) and reproduced under
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License. The map on the right side (c) is produced based directly from the (b) map. The map on the right side (d) map is from
Lenton et al. (2008).
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essential to maintaining optimum ecosystem function or structure (Mills et al., 1993), as well as the
Pareto principle, also known as the 80–20 rule (Pareto, 1896). We hypothesize that a small number of
regions (the “20” in the Pareto principle) have a disproportionate impact on the stability of the Earth
system. We define a keystone region as a region where a water store produces a disproportionately impor-
tant impact and could be essential to maintaining an Earth system component (e.g., atmospheric water in
the Amazon is disproportionately important to the global climate system). “Disportionately important”
refers to the risk of direct or cascading impacts on other systems or regions following local or regional
destabilization. For example, the Pareto principle could be used to identify the 20% of land area with
the greatest weighting and exclude all other regions from global aggregation. For example, for the hydro-
climatic function of atmospheric water store (Figure 3c), the areas with the highest evapotranspiration
recycling ratio are considered keystone regions.
4. “Tipping elements” uses previously identified tipping elements in the Earth system (Lenton et al., 2008).
Tipping elements are defined as subsystems of the Earth system that are at least subcontinental in scale
and can be switched—under certain circumstances—into a qualitatively different state by small pertur-
bations. The tipping point is the corresponding critical point—in forcing and a feature of the system—at
which the future state of the system is qualitatively altered (Lenton et al., 2008) in a regime shift. For
example, for the hydroclimatic function of atmospheric water store (Figure 3d), the monsoon systems
could potentially be considered as atmospheric water tipping elements.
Different methods may be more effective or appropriate for each water store and water planetary sub‐
boundaries. A mixture of the most effective and appropriate methods for each water planetary sub‐boundary
could be used in setting the final planetary boundaries since the existing framework is based on a variety of
different methods and metrics (Rockström et al., 2009a). Although the weighted approach, keystone region
approach, and tipping element approach might all identify regions of hydrologic importance in global
change, there are important differences between them. Tipping elements focus on cohesive subsystems
and identifying regime shifts, whereas the keystone region approach focuses on cumulative and additive
impacts across the Earth system, which may not be a cohesive subsystem and do not necessarily exhibit
tipping behavior. The weighted approach also focuses on cumulative impacts but is less likely to result in
cohesive regions than the keystone region method. All four approaches are different than other approaches
in identifying regions of hydrologic importance in global change, like previous discussions of “water
towers,” since the approaches here focus on changes to the Earth system, whereas “water towers” focus
on the importance of specific regions for water resources.
5.5. Acting Upon Water Cycle Modifications by Setting and Using Water Planetary Sub‐Boundaries
The process of setting fully elaborated planetary sub‐boundaries with clearly defined relationships between
control and response variables for the different water stores may take a considerable amount of time (at least
~5–10 years, comparable to other global change science synthesis activities). Yet there is significant interest
in using the water planetary boundary, so we explored setting interim planetary sub‐boundaries based on
global standards for carbon and existing global data. Interim planetary boundaries for water could be set
by quantifying the change in proposed control variables for each water component under the representative
concentration pathways with related emissions and land use scenarios consistent with the United Nations
Framework Convention on Climate Change Paris Agreement. In other words, these are the water bound-
aries that would arise if global carbon governance actors considered water impacts. These new boundaries
could support water governance that increasingly addresses global issues through global water initiatives
across sectors (Varady et al., 2009). Theoretical exploration of global water governance highlights a combi-
nation of multilevel design with a strong global dimension (Hoekstra, 2006; Pahl‐Wostl et al., 2008). Global
water governance could also be an integral part of a proposed Earth system governance framework
(Biermann et al., 2012), integrated into existing global carbon governance or ideally developed as another
parallel form of global governance.
We suggest that the water planetary boundary provides an effective framework that can integrate with and
complement existing water management approaches at subglobal scales such as watersheds, aquifers, or
nations. Subglobal use of the water planetary boundary is the focus of separate work (Zipper et al., 2020),
and we only briefly introduce it here to highlight the potential utility of the water planetary boundary.
Previous work with the planetary boundary framework at subglobal scales has either attempted to
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calculate a “fair share” of the planetary boundary value allocated to a subglobal domain, for example, a
nation (Häyhä et al., 2018) or use the control–response variable relationship foundational to the planetary
boundary framework to develop local boundaries in a conceptually consistent manner (e.g., Dearing et al.,
2014). Most critically, the planetary boundary framework allows water managers to account for potential
global Earth system impacts of local water cycle modifications (e.g., local responsibility for global environ-
mental challenges), a perspective not captured in existing water management frameworks, and provides a
systematic framework for intercomparison across watershed, countries, companies, or other subglobal units
where water is managed (Zipper et al., 2020). Given the lack of global water management and governance
organizations, effective integration of water management across local‐ to global‐scales may require innova-
tive governance structures and approaches (Biermann, 2012; Galaz et al., 2012).
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