Reservoir evaporation in the western United States: Current science, challenges, and future needs

One way to adapt to and mitigate current and future water scarcity is to manage and store water more efficiently. Reservoirs act as critical buffers to ensure agricultural and municipal water deliveries, mitigate flooding, and generate hydroelectric power, yet they often lose significant amounts of water through evaporation, especially in arid and semiarid regions. Despite this fact, reservoir evaporation has been an inconsistently and inaccurately estimated component of the water cycle within the water resource infrastructure of the arid and semiarid western United States. This paper highlights the increasing importance and challenges of correctly estimating and forecasting reservoir evaporation in the current and future climate, as well as the need to bring new ideas and state-of-the-art practices for the estimation of reservoir evaporation into operational use for modern water resource managers. New ideas and practices include i) improving the estimation of reservoir evaporation using up-to-date knowledge, state-of-the-art instrumentation and numerical models, and innovative experimental designs to diagnose processes and accurately forecast evaporation; ii) improving our understanding of spatial and temporal variations in evaporative water loss from existing reservoirs and transferring this knowledge when expanding reservoirs or siting new ones; and iii) implementing an adaptive management plan that incorporates new knowledge, observations, and forecasts of reservoir evaporation to improve water resource management.

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Related Dataset #1 : Evaporation Data from Lakes Mead and Mohave, Nevada and Arizona, March 2010 through April 2015

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Copyright 2018 American Meteorological Society (AMS).


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Author Friedrich, Katja
Grossman, Robert L.
Huntington, Justin
Blanken, Peter D.
Lenters, John
Holman, Kathleen D.
Gochis, David
Livneh, Ben
Prairie, James
Skeie, Erik
Healey, Nathan C.
Dahm, Katharine
Pearson, Christopher
Finnessey, Taryn
Hook, Simon J.
Kowalski, Ted
Publisher UCAR/NCAR - Library
Publication Date 2018-01-01T00:00:00
Digital Object Identifier (DOI) Not Assigned
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Resource Version N/A
Topic Category geoscientificInformation
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Metadata Date 2023-08-18T19:15:58.899365
Metadata Record Identifier edu.ucar.opensky::articles:21327
Metadata Language eng; USA
Suggested Citation Friedrich, Katja, Grossman, Robert L., Huntington, Justin, Blanken, Peter D., Lenters, John, Holman, Kathleen D., Gochis, David, Livneh, Ben, Prairie, James, Skeie, Erik, Healey, Nathan C., Dahm, Katharine, Pearson, Christopher, Finnessey, Taryn, Hook, Simon J., Kowalski, Ted. (2018). Reservoir evaporation in the western United States: Current science, challenges, and future needs. UCAR/NCAR - Library. http://n2t.net/ark:/85065/d7c82cz5. Accessed 28 June 2025.

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