4.7 Article

Effect of snow cover on water and heat transfer in alpine meadows in the source region of Yellow River

期刊

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
卷 859, 期 -, 页码 -

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.160205

关键词

Field observation; Snow cover; Freezing-thawing cycle; Snowmelt infiltration; Soil heat flux

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Extreme snowfall events have been increasing in the Tibetan Plateau and have caused greater variations in snow cover conditions. This study analyzed the impacts of snow cover on water-heat transfer in alpine meadows using five years of observation data. The findings indicate that snow cover decreases soil temperature and inhibits extremely low temperatures in the soil. Different snow conditions also affect soil thawing, snowmelt infiltration, and surface soil water evaporation. The study provides insights into soil water-heat transfer under extreme snow cover conditions in the Tibetan Plateau.
Extreme snowfall events have been increasing in the Tibetan Plateau, causing greater variations in the snow cover conditions. However, the soil water-heat transfer under different snow conditions has rarely been characterized in detail. Here, by using the multi-source observation data of five years, we analyzed the influences of snow cover on water-heat transfer in alpine meadows of the source region of the Yellow River. The main findings are as follows: In the deep soil, the yearly warming rate from spring to summer was much faster than the cooling rate from autumn to winter, while in the shallow soil, conversely, the former was slower than the latter. Snow cover not only decreased the average soil temperature but also inhibited the occurrence of extremely low temperatures in the soil. The insulation effect of snow was mainly in the mid-frozen period. It was insufficient to balance out the heat lost by the high albedo during early and late frozen periods. In years with more snow, different depths of the soil featured similar thawing dates and plenty of soil voids due to small solid water content and high gravel content, together creating favorable conditions for the snowmelt infiltration, which passed through the frozen layer and infiltrated into the soil of 3.20 m or deeper. In years with less snow, the long-term freezing-thawing cycles aggravated the evaporation and loss of surface soil water in spring. Under different snow cover conditions, the difference in the sensible heat flux was much larger than the latent heat flux in winter and early spring. This study provides a refined physical image of soil water-heat transfer under extreme snow cover conditions in the Tibetan Plateau, which is expected to light the snow cover-frozen soil interaction in the mid-latitude and high-elevation areas.

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