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Institution

International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development

GovernmentKathmandu, Nepal
About: International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development is a government organization based out in Kathmandu, Nepal. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Climate change & Glacier. The organization has 412 authors who have published 829 publications receiving 25106 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
20 Apr 2012-Science
TL;DR: The contemporary evolution of glaciers in the Himalayan region is reviewed, including those of the less well sampled region of the Karakoram to the Northwest, in order to provide a current, comprehensive picture of how they are changing.
Abstract: Himalayan glaciers are a focus of public and scientific debate. Prevailing uncertainties are of major concern because some projections of their future have serious implications for water resources. Most Himalayan glaciers are losing mass at rates similar to glaciers elsewhere, except for emerging indications of stability or mass gain in the Karakoram. A poor understanding of the processes affecting them, combined with the diversity of climatic conditions and the extremes of topographical relief within the region, makes projections speculative. Nevertheless, it is unlikely that dramatic changes in total runoff will occur soon, although continuing shrinkage outside the Karakoram will increase the seasonality of runoff, affect irrigation and hydropower, and alter hazards.

1,561 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The cascading effects of rising temperatures and loss of ice and snow in the region are affecting, for example, water availability, biodiversity, biodiversity and ecosystem boundary shifts, and global feedbacks.
Abstract: The Greater Himalayas hold the largest mass of ice outside polar regions and are the source of the 10 largest rivers in Asia. Rapid reduction in the volume of Himalayan glaciers due to climate change is occurring. The cascading effects of rising temperatures and loss of ice and snow in the region are affecting, for example, water availability (amounts, seasonality), biodiversity (endemic species, predator-prey relations), ecosystem boundary shifts (tree-line movements, high-elevation ecosystem changes), and global feedbacks (monsoonal shifts, loss of soil carbon). Climate change will also have environmental and social impacts that will likely increase uncertainty in water supplies and agricultural production for human populations across Asia. A common understanding of climate change needs to be developed through regional and local-scale research so that mitigation and adaptation strategies can be identified and implemented. The challenges brought about by climate change in the Greater Himalayas can only be addressed through increased regional collaboration in scientific research and policy making.

774 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used a large-scale, high-resolution cryospheric hydrological model to quantify the upstream hydrologogical regimes of the Indus, Ganges, Brahmaputra, Salween and Mekong rivers and analyzed the impacts of climate change on future water availability in these basins using the latest climate model ensemble.
Abstract: Riv ers originating in the high mountains of Asia are among the most meltwater-dependent river systems on Earth, yet large human populations depend on their resources downstream 1 . Across High Asia’s river basins, there is large variation in the contribution of glacier and snow melt to total runo 2 , which is poorlyquantified.Thelackofunderstandingofthehydrological regimes of High Asia’s rivers is one of the main sources of uncertainty in assessing the regional hydrological impacts of climate change 3 . Here we use a large-scale, high-resolution cryospheric‐hydrological model to quantify the upstream hydrological regimes of the Indus, Ganges, Brahmaputra, Salween and Mekong rivers. Subsequently, we analyse the impacts of climate change on future water availability in these basins using the latest climate model ensemble. Despite large dierences in runo composition and regimes between basins and between tributaries within basins, we project an increase in runo at least until 2050 caused primarily by an increase in precipitation in the upper Ganges, Brahmaputra, Salween and Mekong basins and from accelerated melt in the upper Indus Basin. These findings have immediate consequences for climatechangepolicieswhereatransitiontowardscopingwith intra-annual shifts in water availability is desirable. In general, the climate in the eastern part of the Himalayas is characterized by the East-Asian and Indian monsoon systems, causing the bulk of precipitation to occur during JuneSeptember (Supplementary Fig. 4). The precipitation intensity shows a strong northsouth gradient caused by orographic eects 4 . Precipitation patterns in the Hindu Kush and Karakoram ranges in the west are characterized by westerly and southwesterly flows, causing the precipitation to fall more equally distributed over the year 5 (Supplementary Fig. 4). In the Karakoram, up to two-thirds of the annual high-altitude precipitation occurs during the winter months 6,7 . In addition, basin hypsometry determines the ratio of solid and liquid precipitation within a basin. Solid precipitation can be stored long-term as perennial snow, and ice or short-term as seasonal snow before turning into runo by melting, whereas liquid

774 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
16 Jan 2020-Nature
TL;DR: The worldwide distribution and water supply of water towers (snowy or glacierized mountain ranges) is indexed, showing that the most important water towers are also the most vulnerable to socio-economic and climate-change stresses, with huge potential negative impacts on populations downstream.
Abstract: Mountains are the water towers of the world, supplying a substantial part of both natural and anthropogenic water demands1,2. They are highly sensitive and prone to climate change3,4, yet their importance and vulnerability have not been quantified at the global scale. Here we present a global water tower index (WTI), which ranks all water towers in terms of their water-supplying role and the downstream dependence of ecosystems and society. For each water tower, we assess its vulnerability related to water stress, governance, hydropolitical tension and future climatic and socio-economic changes. We conclude that the most important (highest WTI) water towers are also among the most vulnerable, and that climatic and socio-economic changes will affect them profoundly. This could negatively impact 1.9 billion people living in (0.3 billion) or directly downstream of (1.6 billion) mountainous areas. Immediate action is required to safeguard the future of the world’s most important and vulnerable water towers.

730 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: To reduce the uncertainties and to improve the precision of the predictions of the impacts of climate change and human activities on biogeochemical cycles, efforts should focus on conducting more field observation studies, integrating data within improved models, and developing new knowledge about coupling among carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus bioge biochemical cycles.
Abstract: With a pace of about twice the observed rate of global warming, the temperature on the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau (Earth's third pole') has increased by 0.2 degrees C per decade over the past 50years, which results in significant permafrost thawing and glacier retreat. Our review suggested that warming enhanced net primary production and soil respiration, decreased methane (CH4) emissions from wetlands and increased CH4 consumption of meadows, but might increase CH4 emissions from lakes. Warming-induced permafrost thawing and glaciers melting would also result in substantial emission of old carbon dioxide (CO2) and CH4. Nitrous oxide (N2O) emission was not stimulated by warming itself, but might be slightly enhanced by wetting. However, there are many uncertainties in such biogeochemical cycles under climate change. Human activities (e.g. grazing, land cover changes) further modified the biogeochemical cycles and amplified such uncertainties on the plateau. If the projected warming and wetting continues, the future biogeochemical cycles will be more complicated. So facing research in this field is an ongoing challenge of integrating field observations with process-based ecosystem models to predict the impacts of future climate change and human activities at various temporal and spatial scales. To reduce the uncertainties and to improve the precision of the predictions of the impacts of climate change and human activities on biogeochemical cycles, efforts should focus on conducting more field observation studies, integrating data within improved models, and developing new knowledge about coupling among carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus biogeochemical cycles as well as about the role of microbes in these cycles.

615 citations


Authors

Showing all 425 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Walter W. Immerzeel5616111659
Nigel E. Stork5416012242
David Molden4921513592
Arun Bhakta Shrestha431258229
Patrick Wagnon40956177
Francesca Pellicciotti391004955
Ning Wu381594444
Philippus Wester34863910
Martin Schlerf34923947
Nicholas Clinton33645260
Prakash V. Bhave33594741
Eklabya Sharma321022850
Golam Rasul29723050
Joseph M. Shea28553166
Rajesh Bahadur Thapa261222841
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20238
202216
2021105
202082
2019113
201850