TY - JOUR
T1 - Reconstructed streamflow for Citarum River, Java, Indonesia
T2 - Linkages to tropical climate dynamics
AU - D'Arrigo, Rosanne
AU - Abram, Nerilie
AU - Ummenhofer, Caroline
AU - Palmer, Jonathan
AU - Mudelsee, Manfred
PY - 2011/2
Y1 - 2011/2
N2 - The Citarum river basin of western Java, Indonesia, which supplies water to 10 million residents in Jakarta, has become increasingly vulnerable to anthropogenic change. Citarum's streamflow record, only ~45 years in length (1963-present), is too short for understanding the full range of hydrometeorological variability in this important region. Here we present a tree-ring based reconstruction of September-November Citarum streamflow (AD 1759-2006), one of the first such records available for monsoon Asia. Close coupling is observed between decreased tree growth and low streamflow levels, which in turn are associated with drought caused by ENSO warm events in the tropical Pacific and Indian Ocean positive dipole-type variability. Over the full length of record, reconstructed variance was at its weakest during the interval from ~1905-1960, overlapping with a period of unusually-low variability (1920-1960) in the ENSO-Indian Ocean dipole systems. In subsequent decades, increased variance in both the streamflow anomalies and a coral-based SST reconstruction of the Indian Ocean Dipole Mode signal the potential for intensified drought activity and related consequences for water supply and crop productivity in western Java, where much of the country's rice is grown.
AB - The Citarum river basin of western Java, Indonesia, which supplies water to 10 million residents in Jakarta, has become increasingly vulnerable to anthropogenic change. Citarum's streamflow record, only ~45 years in length (1963-present), is too short for understanding the full range of hydrometeorological variability in this important region. Here we present a tree-ring based reconstruction of September-November Citarum streamflow (AD 1759-2006), one of the first such records available for monsoon Asia. Close coupling is observed between decreased tree growth and low streamflow levels, which in turn are associated with drought caused by ENSO warm events in the tropical Pacific and Indian Ocean positive dipole-type variability. Over the full length of record, reconstructed variance was at its weakest during the interval from ~1905-1960, overlapping with a period of unusually-low variability (1920-1960) in the ENSO-Indian Ocean dipole systems. In subsequent decades, increased variance in both the streamflow anomalies and a coral-based SST reconstruction of the Indian Ocean Dipole Mode signal the potential for intensified drought activity and related consequences for water supply and crop productivity in western Java, where much of the country's rice is grown.
KW - Dipole
KW - Drought
KW - ENSO
KW - Java
KW - Streamflow
KW - Tree rings
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=79551607587&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s00382-009-0717-2
DO - 10.1007/s00382-009-0717-2
M3 - Article
SN - 0930-7575
VL - 36
SP - 451
EP - 462
JO - Climate Dynamics
JF - Climate Dynamics
IS - 3
ER -