4.6 Article

Climate Change Impacts on Hydrological Processes in a South-Eastern European Catchment

Journal

WATER
Volume 14, Issue 15, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/w14152325

Keywords

catchment; climate change; hydrological modeling; LTSER; southeastern Europe; SWAT

Funding

  1. eLTER Plus (Advanced Community Project for the eLTER (Integrated European Long-Term Ecosystem, critical zone and socio-ecological Research)) [871128]

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The impacts of future climate changes on hydrological processes in a Romanian catchment were evaluated using global circulation models and the SWAT model. The results showed that the future changes in precipitation and temperature will lead to increased water stress in the area, with changes in soil water content, streamflow, and snow amount. The study also assessed the sensitivity of hydrological processes in the lower portions of the catchment to climate change.
The output extracted from CNRM, MPR, and ICHEC Global Circulation Models for RCP 4.5 and RCP 8.5 Representative Concentration Pathways has been used in conjunction with the SWAT model for evaluating the impacts of future climate changes on hydrological processes in a Romanian catchment (Neajlov, 3720 km(2) area) in the short (2021-2050) and long term (2071-2100). During the growing season, precipitation will decrease by up to 7.5% and temperature will increase by up to 4.2 degrees C by 2100. For the long term (2071-2100), the decrease in soil water content (i.e., 14% under RCP 4.5 and 21.5% under RCP 8.5) and streamflow (i.e., 4.2% under RCP 4.5 and 9.7% under RCP 8.5) during the growing season will accentuate the water stress in an already water-deficient area. The snow amount will be reduced under RCP 8.5 by more than 40% for the long term, consequently impacting the streamflow temporal dynamics. In addition, our results suggest that hydrological processes in the lower portions of the catchment are more sensitive to climate change. This study is the first Romanian catchment-scale study of this nature, and its findings support the development of tailored climate adaptation strategies at local and regional scales in Romania or elsewhere.

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