4.6 Article

Hydrological responses to climatic variability in a cold agricultural region

Journal

HYDROLOGICAL PROCESSES
Volume 31, Issue 4, Pages 854-870

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1002/hyp.11064

Keywords

drought; frozen soil infiltration; prairie hydrology; rainfall runoff; snowmelt; sublimation

Funding

  1. Canada Water Network
  2. Global Institute of Water Security
  3. NSF [IIA-135466]
  4. Office Of The Director
  5. Office of Integrative Activities [1355466] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Extended severe dry and wet periods are frequently observed in the northern continental climate of the Canadian Prairies. Prairie streamflow is mainly driven by spring snowmelt of the winter snowpack, whilst summer rainfall is an important control on evapotranspiration and thus seasonality affects the hydrological response to drought and wet periods in complex ways. A field-tested physically based model was used to investigate the influences of climatic variability on hydrological processes in this region. The model was set up to resolve agricultural fields and to include key cold regions processes. It was parameterized from local and regional measurements without calibration and run for the South Tobacco Creek basin in southern Manitoba, Canada. The model was tested against snow depth and streamflow observations at multiple scales and performed well enough to explore the impacts of wet and dry periods on hydrological processes governing the basin scale hydrological response. Four hydro-climatic patterns with distinctive climatic seasonality and runoff responses were identified from differing combinations of wet/dry winter and summer seasons. Water balance analyses of these patterns identified substantive multiyear subsurface soil moisture storage depletion during drought (2001-2005) and recharge during a subsequent wet period (2009-2011). The fractional percentage of heavy rainfall days was a useful metric to explain the contrasting runoff volumes between dry and wet summers. Finally, a comparison of modeling approaches highlights the importance of antecedent fall soil moisture, ice lens formation during the snowmelt period, and peak snow water equivalent in simulating snowmelt runoff.

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