Journal
HYDROLOGICAL PROCESSES
Volume 25, Issue 1, Pages 152-158Publisher
WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/hyp.7894
Keywords
permafrost thaw; land-cover change; peatlands; northern water resources
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Climate warming and human disturbance in north-western Canada have been accompanied by degradation of permafrost, which introduces considerable uncertainty to the future availability of northern freshwater resources. This study demonstrates the rate and spatial pattern of permafrost loss in a region that typifies the southern boundary of permafrost. Remote-sensing analysis of a 1.0 km(2) area indicates that permafrost occupied 0.70 km(2) in 1947 and decreased with time to 0.43 km(2) by 2008. Ground-based measurements demonstrate the importance of horizontal heat flows in thawing discontinuous permafrost, and show that such thaw produces dramatic land-cover changes that can alter basin runoff production in this region. A major challenge to northern water resources management in the twenty-first century therefore lies in predicting stream flows dynamically in the context of widely occurring permafrost thaw. The need for appropriate water resource planning, mitigation, and adaptation strategies is explained. Copyright (C) 2010 John Wiley & Sons,
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