Mapping the World's Inland Surface Waters: An Upgrade to the Global Lakes and Wetlands Database (GLWD v2)

Authors
Bernhard Lehner
Mira Anand
Etienne Fluet-Chouinard
Florence Tan
Filipe Aires
George Allen
Philippe Bousquet
Josep Canadell
Nick Davidson
Meng Ding
Max Finlayson
Thomas Gumbricht
Lammert Hilarides
Gustaf Hugelius
Robert Jackson
Maartje Korver
Liangyun Liu
Peter McIntyre
Szabolcs Nagy
David Olefeldt
Tamlin Pavelsky
Jean-Francois Pekel
Benjamin Poulter
Catherine Prigent
Jida Wang
Thomas Worthington
Dai Yamazaki
Xiao Zhang
Michele Thieme
Contacts
Resource Date:
2025

 In recognition of the importance of inland waters, numerous datasets mapping their extents, types,
or changes have been created using sources ranging from historical wetland maps to real-time satellite remote sensing. However, differences in definitions and methods have led to spatial and typological inconsistencies among individual data sources, confounding their complementary use and integration. The Global Lakes and Wetlands Database (GLWD), published in 2004, with its globally seamless depiction of 12 major vegetated and non-vegetated wetland classes at 1 km grid cell resolution, has emerged over the last few decades as a foundadtional reference map that has advanced research and conservation planning addressing freshwater biodiversity, ecosystem services, greenhouse gas emissions, land surface processes, hydrology, and human health. Here, we present a new iteration of this map, termed GLWD version 2, generated by harmonizing the latest ground- and satellite-based data products into one single database. Following the same design principle as its predecessor, GLWD v2 aims to avoid double counting of overlapping surface water features while differentiating between natural and non-natural lakes, rivers of multiple sizes, and several other wetland types. The classification of GLWD v2 incorporates information on seasonality (i.e., permanent vs. intermittent vs. ephemeral); inundation vs. saturation (i.e., flooding vs. waterlogged soils), vegetation cover (e.g., forested swamps vs. non-forested marshes), salinity (e.g., salt pans), natural vs. non-natural origins (e.g., rice paddies), and stratification of landscape position and water source (e.g., riverine, lacustrine, palustrine, coastal/marine). GLWD v2 represents 33 wetland classes and – including all intermittent classes – depicts a maximum of 18.2 × 106 km2 of wetlands (13.4 % of
the global land area excluding Antarctica). The spatial extent of each class is provided as the fractional coverage within each grid cell at a resolution of 15 arcsec (approximately 500 m at the Equator), with cell fractions derived from input data at resolutions as small as 10 m. The upgraded GLWD v2 offers an improved representation of inland surface water extents and their classification for contemporary conditions (1984–2020). Despite being a static map, it includes classes that denote intrinsic temporal dynamics. GLWD v2 is designed to facilitate large-scale hydrological, ecological, biogeochemical, and conservation applications, aiming to support the study and protection of wetland ecosystems around the world. The GLWD v2 database is available at https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.28519994 (Lehner et al., 2025).