Climate And Hydrology In Mountain Areas Provides A Comprehensive Overview Of The Interaction Of Hydrological And Climatological Processes In Mountain Environments. This Book Provides An Understanding Of Present Experimental And Theoretical Work On Hydrology And Climatology In Mountain Areas, Bridgin
Sensitivity of the snowcover energetics in a mountain basin to variations in climate
β Scribed by Michele L. Reba; Danny Marks; Adam Winstral; Timothy E. Link; Mukesh Kumar
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2011
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 351 KB
- Volume
- 25
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0885-6087
- DOI
- 10.1002/hyp.8155
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β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
Snow is an important natural reservoir that holds water on the landscape for release later in the season in western North America and other portions of the world. As air temperature increases with global climate change, the character of the generally established seasonal snowcover will be affected. To study the specific response to variable climate, a carefully collected and processed meteorological data set for the 1984β2008 water years (WYs) was assembled for a snowβdominated headwater mountain catchment. The data were used to force a physically based, distributed energy balance snow model to simulate patterns of snow deposition and melt over the catchment for the 25βyear period. This period covers both the highest (1984) and lowest (1992) snow seasons on record and exhibits extreme interβannual variability. This unique forcing data set captured meteorological conditions that resulted in the range of variability in snowcover accumulation, timing of ablation, and the timing and amount of surface water input (SWI), and discharge during the 25βyear study period. SWI is the amount of liquid water delivered to the soil surface from melting snow or from rain that passes through the snowcover or falls directly on the soil. Warm winters, characterized by earlyβ and midβwinter rain, triggered earlier inputs from SWI and response in discharge than cool winters. Cool conditions prolonged the generation of SWI and streamflow out of the basin. Very wet conditions that were warm passed 50% of the SWI 27 days earlier and passed 50% of the discharge 15 days earlier, when compared to very wet conditions that were cool. Warmer conditions produced less snow water equivalent, shortened the melt season, and would be expected to extend the summer drought. Copyright Β© 2011 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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