4.7 Article

Snowmelt rate dictates streamflow

Journal

GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS
Volume 43, Issue 15, Pages 8006-8016

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1002/2016GL069690

Keywords

water; snowmelt; streamflow; modeling; hydroclimatology; Budyko

Funding

  1. USDA-NSF Water Sustainability and Climate grant [2012-67003-19802]
  2. NSF Boulder Creek CZO [EAR-9810218]
  3. NSF Hydrological Sciences [EAR-1141764]
  4. NSF [EAR-1144894]
  5. USDA NIFA [NEV05293]
  6. NSF Niwot Ridge LTER [DEB-1027341]
  7. NASA Earth and Space Science Fellowship

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Declining mountain snowpack and earlier snowmelt across the western United States has implications for downstream communities. We present a possible mechanism linking snowmelt rate and streamflow generation using a gridded implementation of the Budyko framework. We computed an ensemble of Budyko streamflow anomalies (BSAs) using Variable Infiltration Capacity model-simulated evapotranspiration, potential evapotranspiration, and estimated precipitation at 1/16 degrees resolution from 1950 to 2013. BSA was correlated with simulated baseflow efficiency (r(2)=0.64) and simulated snowmelt rate (r(2)=0.42). The strong correlation between snowmelt rate and baseflow efficiency (r(2)=0.73) links these relationships and supports a possible streamflow generation mechanism wherein greater snowmelt rates increase subsurface flow. Rapid snowmelt may thus bring the soil to field capacity, facilitating below-root zone percolation, streamflow, and a positive BSA. Previous works have shown that future increases in regional air temperature may lead to earlier, slower snowmelt and hence decreased streamflow production via the mechanism proposed by this work.

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