Yukon River Basin long‐term (1977–2006) hydrologic and climatic analysis

Abstract In this study, long‐term discharge data and climate records, such as temperature and precipitation during 1977–2006, have been used to define basin climatic and hydrologic regimes and changes. Discharge analyses at four key gauging stations (Eagle, Stevens Village, Nenana, and Pilot Station...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Hydrological Processes
Main Authors: Ge, Shaoqing, Yang, Daqing, Kane, Douglas L.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/hyp.9282
https://api.wiley.com/onlinelibrary/tdm/v1/articles/10.1002%2Fhyp.9282
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1002/hyp.9282
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Summary:Abstract In this study, long‐term discharge data and climate records, such as temperature and precipitation during 1977–2006, have been used to define basin climatic and hydrologic regimes and changes. Discharge analyses at four key gauging stations (Eagle, Stevens Village, Nenana, and Pilot Station) in the Yukon River Basin show that the runoff in the cold season (November to April) is low with small variations, whereas it is high (28 500–177 000 ft 3 /s; 810–5000 m 3 /s) with high fluctuations in the warm season (May to October). The Stevens Village Station is in the upper basin and has similar changes with the flow near basin outlet. Flow increases in May (61 074 ft 3 /s; 1729 m 3 /s) and September (23 325 ft 3 /s; 660 m 3 /s); and decreases in July (35 174 ft 3 /s; 996 m 3 /s) and August (6809 ft 3 /s; 193 m 3 /s). Discharge in May at the Pilot Station (near the basin outlet) shows a positive trend (177 000 ft 3 /s; 5010 m 3 /s). Daily flow analyses show high fluctuation during the warm season and very low flow during the cold season; the 10‐year average analyses of daily flow at Pilot Station show a small increase in the peak and its timing shifted to a little earlier date. The annual flow, average of 227 900 ft 3 /s (6450 m 3 /s) with high inter‐annual fluctuations, has increased by 18 200 ft 3 /s (or 8%; 520 m 3 /s) during 1977–2006. From 1977 to 2006, basin air temperature in June has increased by 3.9 °F (2.2 °C) and decreased by 10.5 °F (5.8 °C) in January. A strong and positive correlation exists between air temperature in April and discharge in May, whereas a strong and negative correlation relates August temperature and September discharge. Negative trend during 1977–2006 is observed for precipitation in June (0.6 in.; 15 mm) with a confidence over 93%. Precipitation in August and September has strong and positive correlations with discharge in September and October at basin outlet; the precipitation in other months has weak correlation with the discharge. The mean annual precipitation during ...