Changing hydrologic connectivity due to permafrost thaw in the lower Liard River valley, NWT, Canada

Abstract Flows from river basins in northwestern Canada have been rising in the last two decades as a result of climate warming. In the wetland‐dominated basins that characterise the southern margin of permafrost, permafrost thaw and disappearance, and resulting land‐cover change, is occurring at an...

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Published in:Hydrological Processes
Main Authors: Connon, Ryan F., Quinton, William L., Craig, James R., Hayashi, Masaki
Other Authors: Canadian Space Agency, Canadian Foundation for Climate and Atmospheric Sciences
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2014
Subjects:
Ice
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/hyp.10206
https://api.wiley.com/onlinelibrary/tdm/v1/articles/10.1002%2Fhyp.10206
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1002/hyp.10206
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spelling crwiley:10.1002/hyp.10206 2024-10-13T14:07:58+00:00 Changing hydrologic connectivity due to permafrost thaw in the lower Liard River valley, NWT, Canada Connon, Ryan F. Quinton, William L. Craig, James R. Hayashi, Masaki Canadian Space Agency Canadian Foundation for Climate and Atmospheric Sciences 2014 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/hyp.10206 https://api.wiley.com/onlinelibrary/tdm/v1/articles/10.1002%2Fhyp.10206 https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1002/hyp.10206 en eng Wiley http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/termsAndConditions#vor Hydrological Processes volume 28, issue 14, page 4163-4178 ISSN 0885-6087 1099-1085 journal-article 2014 crwiley https://doi.org/10.1002/hyp.10206 2024-09-17T04:51:42Z Abstract Flows from river basins in northwestern Canada have been rising in the last two decades as a result of climate warming. In the wetland‐dominated basins that characterise the southern margin of permafrost, permafrost thaw and disappearance, and resulting land‐cover change, is occurring at an unprecedented rate. The impact of this thaw on runoff generation in headwater basins is poorly understood. Permafrost thaw has the potential to fundamentally alter the cycling and storage of moisture inputs in this region by altering the type and relative proportions of the major land‐cover types, such as peat plateaus, channel fens and flat bogs. This paper examines streamflow changes in the four Water Survey of Canada gauged river basins (152–2050 km 2 ) in the lower Liard River valley, Northwest Territories, Canada, a region where permafrost thaw has produced widespread loss of forest and concomitant expansion of permafrost‐free wetlands. Annual runoff in the lower Liard Valley increased by between 112 and 160 mm over the period of 1996–2012. The Mann‐Kendall non‐parametric statistical test and the Kendall‐Theil robust line were used to ascertain changes in streamflow. Historical aerial photographs from 1977 and high‐resolution satellite imagery (WorldView 2) from 2010 were used to measure the rate and pattern of permafrost thaw in a representative 6 km 2 area of Scotty Creek. Permafrost thaw‐induced land‐cover change is both increasing the adjacency between runoff producing and transmitting land cover types and transforming certain land covers that store water into ones that produce runoff. This land‐cover change was found to be the single most important factor (37–61 mm) contributing to the observed increase in river discharge. Other contributing factors include increases in plateau runoff contributing areas (20–32 mm), increases in annual effective precipitation depth (18–30 mm), contribution of water from the melt of ice within permafrost (9 mm) and increases in baseflow (0.9–6.8 mm). Although runoff has ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Ice Liard River Northwest Territories Peat permafrost Wiley Online Library Northwest Territories Canada Kendall ENVELOPE(-59.828,-59.828,-63.497,-63.497) Liard ENVELOPE(-67.417,-67.417,-66.850,-66.850) Scotty Creek ENVELOPE(-121.561,-121.561,61.436,61.436) Hydrological Processes 28 14 4163 4178
institution Open Polar
collection Wiley Online Library
op_collection_id crwiley
language English
description Abstract Flows from river basins in northwestern Canada have been rising in the last two decades as a result of climate warming. In the wetland‐dominated basins that characterise the southern margin of permafrost, permafrost thaw and disappearance, and resulting land‐cover change, is occurring at an unprecedented rate. The impact of this thaw on runoff generation in headwater basins is poorly understood. Permafrost thaw has the potential to fundamentally alter the cycling and storage of moisture inputs in this region by altering the type and relative proportions of the major land‐cover types, such as peat plateaus, channel fens and flat bogs. This paper examines streamflow changes in the four Water Survey of Canada gauged river basins (152–2050 km 2 ) in the lower Liard River valley, Northwest Territories, Canada, a region where permafrost thaw has produced widespread loss of forest and concomitant expansion of permafrost‐free wetlands. Annual runoff in the lower Liard Valley increased by between 112 and 160 mm over the period of 1996–2012. The Mann‐Kendall non‐parametric statistical test and the Kendall‐Theil robust line were used to ascertain changes in streamflow. Historical aerial photographs from 1977 and high‐resolution satellite imagery (WorldView 2) from 2010 were used to measure the rate and pattern of permafrost thaw in a representative 6 km 2 area of Scotty Creek. Permafrost thaw‐induced land‐cover change is both increasing the adjacency between runoff producing and transmitting land cover types and transforming certain land covers that store water into ones that produce runoff. This land‐cover change was found to be the single most important factor (37–61 mm) contributing to the observed increase in river discharge. Other contributing factors include increases in plateau runoff contributing areas (20–32 mm), increases in annual effective precipitation depth (18–30 mm), contribution of water from the melt of ice within permafrost (9 mm) and increases in baseflow (0.9–6.8 mm). Although runoff has ...
author2 Canadian Space Agency
Canadian Foundation for Climate and Atmospheric Sciences
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Connon, Ryan F.
Quinton, William L.
Craig, James R.
Hayashi, Masaki
spellingShingle Connon, Ryan F.
Quinton, William L.
Craig, James R.
Hayashi, Masaki
Changing hydrologic connectivity due to permafrost thaw in the lower Liard River valley, NWT, Canada
author_facet Connon, Ryan F.
Quinton, William L.
Craig, James R.
Hayashi, Masaki
author_sort Connon, Ryan F.
title Changing hydrologic connectivity due to permafrost thaw in the lower Liard River valley, NWT, Canada
title_short Changing hydrologic connectivity due to permafrost thaw in the lower Liard River valley, NWT, Canada
title_full Changing hydrologic connectivity due to permafrost thaw in the lower Liard River valley, NWT, Canada
title_fullStr Changing hydrologic connectivity due to permafrost thaw in the lower Liard River valley, NWT, Canada
title_full_unstemmed Changing hydrologic connectivity due to permafrost thaw in the lower Liard River valley, NWT, Canada
title_sort changing hydrologic connectivity due to permafrost thaw in the lower liard river valley, nwt, canada
publisher Wiley
publishDate 2014
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/hyp.10206
https://api.wiley.com/onlinelibrary/tdm/v1/articles/10.1002%2Fhyp.10206
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1002/hyp.10206
long_lat ENVELOPE(-59.828,-59.828,-63.497,-63.497)
ENVELOPE(-67.417,-67.417,-66.850,-66.850)
ENVELOPE(-121.561,-121.561,61.436,61.436)
geographic Northwest Territories
Canada
Kendall
Liard
Scotty Creek
geographic_facet Northwest Territories
Canada
Kendall
Liard
Scotty Creek
genre Ice
Liard River
Northwest Territories
Peat
permafrost
genre_facet Ice
Liard River
Northwest Territories
Peat
permafrost
op_source Hydrological Processes
volume 28, issue 14, page 4163-4178
ISSN 0885-6087 1099-1085
op_rights http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/termsAndConditions#vor
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1002/hyp.10206
container_title Hydrological Processes
container_volume 28
container_issue 14
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