4.7 Article

Combined influence of maximum accumulation and melt rates on the duration of the seasonal snowpack over temperate mountains

Journal

JOURNAL OF HYDROLOGY
Volume 608, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jhydrol.2022.127574

Keywords

Snowpack; Mountains; Peak SWE; Snow cover duration; Melt rate

Funding

  1. Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness [CGL2017-82216-R]
  2. OPCC-ADAPYR (POCTEFA 2014-2020, Interreg V-A)

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This study examines the contribution of annual peak snow water equivalent (SWE) and seasonal melt rate to the duration of the snowpack in temperate mountains. The results show that peak SWE has a greater influence on snow cover duration, while melt rates dominate in lower elevations with high interannual variability. The study highlights the control of precipitation and temperature on snow cover duration and suggests an increased importance of melt rates with rising temperatures. The findings are applicable to other temperate mountain areas worldwide.
The duration of the seasonal snowpack determines numerous aspects of the water cycle, ecology and the economy in cold and mountainous regions, and is a balance between the magnitude of accumulated snow and the rate of melt. The contribution of each component has not been well quantified under contrasting topography and climatological conditions although this may provide useful insights into how snow cover duration could respond to climate change. Here, we examined the contribution of the annual peak snow water equivalent (SWE) and the seasonal melt rate to define the duration of the snowpack over temperate mountains, using snow data for mountain areas with different climatological characteristics across the Iberian Peninsula. We used a daily snowpack database for the period 1980-2014 over Iberia to derive the seasonal peak SWE, melt rate and season snow cover duration. The influence of peak SWE and melt rates on seasonal snow cover duration was estimated using a stepwise linear model approach.The stepwise linear models showed high R-adjusted values (average R-adjusted = 0.7), without any clear dependence on the elevation or geographical location. In general, the peak SWE influenced the snow cover duration over all of the mountain areas analysed to a greater extent than the melt rates (89.1%, 89.2%, 81.6% 93.2% and 95.5% in the areas for the Cantabrian, Central, Iberian, Pyrenees and Sierra Nevada mountain ranges, respectively). At these colder sites, the melt season occurs mostly in the spring and tends to occur very fast. In contrast, the areas where the melt rates dominated snow cover duration were located systematically at lower elevations, due to the high interannual variability in the occurrence of annual peak SWE (in winter or early spring), yielding highly variable melt rates. However, in colder sites the melt season occurs mostly in spring and it is very fast in most of the years. The results highlight the control that the seasonal precipitation patterns, in combination with temperature, exert on the seasonal snow cover duration by influencing the peak SWE and suggest a future increased importance of melt rates as temperatures increase. Despite the high climatological variability of the Iberian mountain ranges, the results showed a consistent behaviour along the different mountain ranges, indicating that the methods and results may be transferrable to other temperate mountain areas of the world.

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