Sensitivity Analysis of Discharge in the Arctic Usa Basin East-European Russia

The high sensitivity of the Arctic implies that impact of climate change and related environmental changes on river discharge can be considerable. Sensitivity of discharge to changes in precipitation, temperature, permafrost and vegetation, was studied in the Usa basin, Northeast- European Russia. F...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Van der Linden, S., Virtanen, T., Oberman, N., Kuhry, P.
Other Authors: Department of Biological and Environmental Sciences, Bio- ja ympäristötieteiden laitos, Bio- och miljövetenskaper, Institutionen för
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Springer Science+Business Media B.V. 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1975/239
Description
Summary:The high sensitivity of the Arctic implies that impact of climate change and related environmental changes on river discharge can be considerable. Sensitivity of discharge to changes in precipitation, temperature, permafrost and vegetation, was studied in the Usa basin, Northeast- European Russia. For this purpose, a distributed hydrological model (RHINEFLOW) was adapted. Furthermore, the effect of climate change simulated by a GCM (HADCM2S750 integration) on runoff was assessed, including indirect effects of permafrost thawing and changes in vegetation distribution. The study shows that discharge in the Usa basin is highly sensitive to changes in precipitation and temperature. The effect of precipitation change is present throughout the year, while temperature changes affect discharge only in seasons when temperature fluctuates around the freezing point (April and October). Discharge is rather sensitive to changes in vegetation. Sensitivity to permafrost occurrence is high in winter, because infiltration and consequently base flow increases if permafrost melts. The effect of climate change simulated by the scenario on discharge was significant. Peak flow can both decrease (by 22%) and increase (by 19%) compared with present-day, depending on the amount of winter precipitation. Also, runoff peaks earlier in the season. These results can have implications for the magnitude and timing of the runoff peak, break-up and water-levels.