Authors
Amir AghaKouchak, Hamid Norouzi, Kaveh Madani, Ali Mirchi, Marzi Azarderakhsh, Ali Nazemi, Nasrin Nasrollahi, Alireza Farahmand, Ali Mehran, Elmira Hasanzadeh
Publication date
2015/3/1
Journal
Journal of Great Lakes Research
Volume
41
Issue
1
Pages
307-311
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Lake Urmia, one of the largest saltwater lakes on earth and a highly endangered ecosystem, is on the brink of a major environmental disaster similar to the catastrophic death of the Aral Sea. With a new composite of multi-spectral high resolution satellite observations, we show that the area of this Iranian lake has decreased by around 88% in the past decades, far more than previously reported (~ 25% to 50%). The lake's shoreline has been receding severely with no sign of recovery, which has been partly blamed on prolonged droughts. We use the lake basin's satellite-based gauge-adjusted climate record of the Standardized Precipitation Index data to demonstrate that the on-going shoreline retreat is not solely an artifact of prolonged droughts alone. Drastic changes to lake health are primarily consequences of aggressive regional water resources development plans, intensive agricultural activities …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
A AghaKouchak, H Norouzi, K Madani, A Mirchi… - Journal of Great Lakes Research, 2015