The Huang-Huai-Hai river basin (HHH) in China. This investigation employs the Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) model to quantify the hydro-climatic impacts of vegetation change. Through comparative simulations driven by 2001 and 2022 Land Use/Land Cover scenarios, this study isolates basin-scale eco-hydrological responses to over two decades of vegetation restoration. Basin-wide vegetation improved substantially (LAI and FVC increased >50%). This ecological restoration significantly altered regional hydrology through distinct mechanisms: (1) In areas with pronounced greening (Loess Plateau and the mountainous regions of the Haihe river basin, M-HaiB), elevated evapotranspiration (ET, +2.69%) increased horizontal (+1.49%) and vertical (+1.35%) water vapor fluxes. (2) Approximately 55% of this ET enhancement converted to local precipitation, generating up to a 15 mm increase in the southeastern Huanghe river basin and M-HaiB. (3) Thermodynamically, vegetation change reshaped the surface energy balance by increasing latent heat flux and decreasing sensible heat flux. (4) Aerodynamically, this energy shift, combined with reduced near-surface winds and intensified vertical velocities, enhanced moisture retention and transport. Consequently, downwind regions (the northern Huanghe and the plain regions of the Haihe river basin, P-HaiB) displayed a 10 mm precipitation increase, closely associated with growing-season water vapor transport via the southeastern monsoon. These findings quantitatively elucidate basin-scale eco-hydrological-climatic coupling mechanisms. • Vegetation cover in HHH basin significantly improved during 2001–2022. • Increased vegetation leads to increased evapotranspiration, with approximately 55% of this converted into precipitation. • The southeasterly monsoon during the growing season causes changes in meteorological elements in downwind areas. • The climatic effects of vegetation change are primarily realized through influencing surface heat and wind speeds.
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Haodong Deng
Yu Wang
Qingming Wang
Journal of Hydrology Regional Studies
Ministry of Water Resources of the People's Republic of China
China Institute of Water Resources and Hydropower Research
Yellow River Institute of Hydraulic Research
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Deng et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69a91cbed6127c7a504bfa53 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejrh.2026.103304