## Abstract The future runoff from three highly glacierized alpine catchments is assessed for the period 2007–2100 using a glacio‐hydrological model including the change in glacier coverage. We apply scenarios for the seasonal change in temperature and precipitation derived from regional climate mo
Effect of climate change on runoff of a glacierized Himalayan basin
✍ Scribed by Pratap Singh; Manohar Arora; N. K. Goel
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2006
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 336 KB
- Volume
- 20
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0885-6087
- DOI
- 10.1002/hyp.5991
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
The continuous increase in the emission of greenhouse gases has resulted in global warming, and substantial changes in the global climate are expected by the end of the current century. The reductions in mass, volume, area and length of glaciers on the global scale are considered as clear signals of a warmer climate. The increased rate of melting under a warmer climate has resulted in the retreating of glaciers. On the long-term scale, greater melting of glaciers during the coming years could lead to the depletion of available water resources and influence water flows in rivers. It is also very likely that such changes have occurred in Himalayan glaciers, but might have gone unnoticed or not studied in detail. The water resources of the Himalayan region may also be highly vulnerable to such climate changes, because more than 50% of the water resources of India are located in the various tributaries of the Ganges, Indus and the Brahmaputra river system, which are highly dependent on snow and glacier runoff.
In the present study, the snowmelt model SNOWMOD has been used to simulate the melt runoff from a highly glacierized small basin for the summer season. The model simulated the distribution and volume of runoff with reasonably good accuracy. Based on a 2-year simulation, it is found that, on average, the contributions of glacier melt and rainfall in the total runoff are 87% and 13% respectively. The impact of climate change on the monthly distribution of runoff and total summer runoff has been studied with respect to plausible scenarios of temperature and rainfall, both individually and in combined scenarios. The analysis included six temperature scenarios ranging between 0Ð5 and 3 °C, and four rainfall scenarios ( 10%, 5%, 5%, 10%). The combined scenarios were generated using temperature and rainfall scenarios. The combined scenarios represented a combination of warmer and drier and a combination of warmer and wetter conditions in the study area. The results indicate that, for the study basin, runoff increased linearly with increase in temperature and rainfall. For a temperature rise of 2 °C, the increase in summer streamflow is computed to be about 28%. Changes in rainfall by š10% resulted in corresponding changes in streamflow by š3Ð5%. For the range of climatic scenarios considered, the changes in runoff are more sensitive to changes in temperature, compared with rainfall, which is likely due to the major contribution of melt water in runoff. Such studies are needed for proper assessment of available water resources under a changing climate in the Himalayan region.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract The present study sets out to investigate the sensitivity of water availability to climate change for a large western Himalayan river (the Satluj River basin with an area of 22 275 km^2^ and elevation range of 500 to 7000 m), which receives contributions from rain, snow and glacier melt
The combined in¯uence of increased temperatures and changed precipitation on the seasonal snow cover and runo is evaluated for the Upper Rhine Basin at Felsberg (3250 km 2 , 560±3614 m a.s.l.). The runo regime re¯ects the snow accumulation in the winter half-year and snowmelt in the summer half-year
## Abstract Influences of climatic change on the components of global hydrological cycle, including runoff and evapotranspiration are significant in the mid‐ and high‐latitude basins. In this paper, the effect of climatic change on annual runoff is evaluated in a large basin—Songhua River basin whi
## Abstract The hydrological response to climate change in the Tarim River Basin was investigated by analysing the hydrological, temperature and precipitation data of the past 50 years. The long‐term trend of the hydrological time‐series, including air temperature, precipitation, and streamflow, wa
## Abstract Potential climate change is expected to produce substantial effects on the hydrological cycle. In a companion paper (Burlando P, Rosso R. __Hydrological Processes__ this issue) the effects on precipitation have been discussed, with particular attention being given to significant changes