4.6 Article

Changes to flood peaks of a mountain river: implications for analysis of the 2013 flood in the Upper Bow River, Canada

期刊

HYDROLOGICAL PROCESSES
卷 30, 期 25, 页码 4657-4673

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/hyp.10957

关键词

floods; snowmelt; rain-on-snow; Canadian Rockies; return periods; hydroclimate trends

资金

  1. Alberta Department of Environment and Sustainable Resource Development
  2. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
  3. Canada Research Chairs
  4. Canada Excellence Research Chair in Water Security

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The mountain headwater Bow River at Banff, Alberta, Canada, was subject to a large flood in June 2013, over which considerable debate has ensued regarding its probability of occurrence. It is therefore instructive to consider what information long-term streamflow discharge records provide about environmental change in the Upper Bow River basin above Banff. Though protected as part of Banff National Park, since 1885, the basin has experienced considerable climate and land cover changes, each of which has the potential to impact observations, and hence the interpretations of flood probability. The Bow River at Banff hydrometric station is one of Canada's longest-operating reference hydrological basin network stations and so has great value for assessing changes in flow regime over time. Furthermore, the station measures a river that provides an extremely important water supply for Calgary and irrigation district downstream and so is of great interest for assessing regional water security. These records were examined for changes in several flood attributes and to determine whether flow changes may have been related to landscape change within the basin as caused by forest fires, conversion from grasslands to forest with fire suppression, and regional climate variations and/or trends. Floods in the Upper Bow River are generated by both snowmelt and rain-on-snow (ROS) events, the latter type which include flood events generated by spatially and temporally large storms such as occurred in 2013. The two types of floods also have different frequency characteristics. Snowmelt and ROS flood attributes were not correlated significantly with any climate index or with burned area except that snowmelt event duration correlated negatively to the Pacific Decadal Oscillation. While there is a significant negative trend in all floods over the past 100 years, when separated based on generating process, neither snowmelt floods nor large ROS floods associated with mesoscale storms show any trends over time. Despite extensive changes to the landscape of the basin and in within the climate system, the flood regime remains unchanged, something identified at smaller scales in the region but never at larger scales. Copyright (C) 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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