4.5 Article

Heterogeneous snowpack response and snow drought occurrence across river basins of northwestern North America under 1.0°C to 4.0°C global warming

Journal

CLIMATIC CHANGE
Volume 164, Issue 3-4, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10584-021-02968-7

Keywords

Climatic controls; Global mean temperature change; Large ensemble RCM; Northwestern north america; Snow drought

Funding

  1. Environment and Climate Change Canada

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The study predicts that under global warming, there will be a decline in snow water equivalent in large river basins of northwestern North America, with more severe declines in southern regions and the possibility of small increases or decreases in northern regions. The findings suggest that temperature and precipitation play a significant role in these changes, and that southern basins with high water demands are likely to experience the most extreme occurrences of snow drought.
Anthropogenic climate change is affecting the snowpack freshwater storage, with socioeconomic and ecological impacts. We present an assessment of maximum snow water equivalent (SWEmax) change in large river basins of the northwestern North America region using the Canadian Regional Climate Model 50-member ensemble under 1.0 degrees C to 4.0 degrees C global warming thresholds above the pre-industrial period. The projections indicate steep SWEmax decline in the warmer coastal/southern basins (i.e., Skeena, Fraser and Columbia), moderate decline in the milder interior basins (i.e., Peace, Athabasca and Saskatchewan), and either a small increase or decrease in the colder northern basins (i.e., Yukon, Peel, and Liard). A key factor for these spatial differences is the proximity of winter mean temperature to the freeze/melt threshold, with larger SWEmax declines for the basins closer to the threshold. Using the random forests machine-learning model, we find that the SWEmax change is primarily temperature controlled, especially for warmer basins. Further, under a categorical framework of below-normal SWEmax defined as snow drought (SD), we find that above-normal temperature and precipitation are the dominant conditions for SD occurrences under higher global warming thresholds. This implies a limited capacity of precipitation increase to compensate the temperature-driven snowpack decline. Additionally, the frequency and severity of SD occurrences are projected to be most extreme in the southern basins where current water demands are highest. Overall, the results of this study, including insights on snowpack changes, their climatic controls, and the framework for SD classification, are applicable for basins spanning a range of hydro-climatological regimes.

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