Past and Future Hydrology Near the Arctic Treeline

The Arctic has warmed rapidly, increasing shrub cover and density, and thawing permafrost. Understanding, quantifying and predicting the impact of these environmental changes on the hydrological regime of Arctic headwater basins represents a great scientific challenge, particularly due to the sparse...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Krogh Navarro, Sebastian Alberto 1987-
Other Authors: Pomeroy, John, Martz, Lawrence, de Boer, Dirk, Pietroniro, Alain, Guo, Xulin
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: University of Saskatchewan 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10388/11807
id ftusaskatchewan:oai:harvest.usask.ca:10388/11807
record_format openpolar
spelling ftusaskatchewan:oai:harvest.usask.ca:10388/11807 2023-05-15T13:03:36+02:00 Past and Future Hydrology Near the Arctic Treeline Krogh Navarro, Sebastian Alberto 1987- Pomeroy, John Martz, Lawrence de Boer, Dirk Pietroniro, Alain Guo, Xulin 2019-01-23T21:28:22Z application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10388/11807 unknown University of Saskatchewan http://hdl.handle.net/10388/11807 TC-SSU-11807 Snow Permafrost Hydrology Climate Change Modelling Thesis text 2019 ftusaskatchewan 2022-01-17T11:51:01Z The Arctic has warmed rapidly, increasing shrub cover and density, and thawing permafrost. Understanding, quantifying and predicting the impact of these environmental changes on the hydrological regime of Arctic headwater basins represents a great scientific challenge, particularly due to the sparse monitoring network, limited understanding of governing physical processes and their interaction, and the uncertainty in future climate projections. The purpose of this research is to better understand the impact of climate and vegetation change on the hydrology of Arctic basins near the treeline. This thesis is divided into four sections with the following objectives: (1) to test the coupling of a ground freeze/thaw algorithm with a hydrological model at two research sites in northern Yukon; (2) to diagnose the hydrology of a small Arctic basin near the treeline using a physically based hydrological model; (3) to quantify its historical long-term changes and investigate the individual and combined effect of changing climate and vegetation on its hydrology; and (4) to use high-resolution climate simulations under a high gas concentration scenario along with expected vegetation changes, to investigate changes to hydrological processes and regime. Results revealed the importance of including vegetation dynamics such as changes in shrub extension and density in hydrological models, to capture their impact on blowing snow redistribution and sublimation, and canopy interception and sublimation of snow, something neglected by current studies. This study demonstrated that increasing shrub extension and density near the Arctic treeline slightly compensates the historical decrease in mean annual discharge produced by the decreasing precipitation, providing a small degree of hydrological resiliency. Historical change analysis revealed that hydrological processes are decelerating near the Arctic treeline, such as decreasing evapotranspiration, soil moisture, sublimation and streamflow, mostly driven by climate change. However, under sufficient climate change (38% and 6.1 °C increase in mean annual precipitation and temperature, respectively) significant hydrological changes are expected, reversing the simulated historical changes. Projections show a significant increase in mean annual streamflow discharge, shortening of the snowcover seasons, deepening of the active layer thickness, increasing peak snow accumulation and earlier and larger peak streamflow. Whilst specific to one basin, they indicate the nature of hydrological changes facing Arctic hydrology. These changes will have significant impacts on ecosystems, infrastructure, landscape evolution and atmospheric feedbacks, which are required to be properly understood and quantified to design sustainable and effective mitigation and adaptation plans. The analyses and discussions presented in this study to diagnose the past and predict future Arctic hydrology are relevant for the scientific community of hydrologists, engineers, water managers and policy makers, particularly those interested in cold regions. Thesis Active layer thickness Arctic Basin Arctic Climate change permafrost Yukon University of Saskatchewan: eCommons@USASK Arctic Yukon
institution Open Polar
collection University of Saskatchewan: eCommons@USASK
op_collection_id ftusaskatchewan
language unknown
topic Snow
Permafrost
Hydrology
Climate Change
Modelling
spellingShingle Snow
Permafrost
Hydrology
Climate Change
Modelling
Krogh Navarro, Sebastian Alberto 1987-
Past and Future Hydrology Near the Arctic Treeline
topic_facet Snow
Permafrost
Hydrology
Climate Change
Modelling
description The Arctic has warmed rapidly, increasing shrub cover and density, and thawing permafrost. Understanding, quantifying and predicting the impact of these environmental changes on the hydrological regime of Arctic headwater basins represents a great scientific challenge, particularly due to the sparse monitoring network, limited understanding of governing physical processes and their interaction, and the uncertainty in future climate projections. The purpose of this research is to better understand the impact of climate and vegetation change on the hydrology of Arctic basins near the treeline. This thesis is divided into four sections with the following objectives: (1) to test the coupling of a ground freeze/thaw algorithm with a hydrological model at two research sites in northern Yukon; (2) to diagnose the hydrology of a small Arctic basin near the treeline using a physically based hydrological model; (3) to quantify its historical long-term changes and investigate the individual and combined effect of changing climate and vegetation on its hydrology; and (4) to use high-resolution climate simulations under a high gas concentration scenario along with expected vegetation changes, to investigate changes to hydrological processes and regime. Results revealed the importance of including vegetation dynamics such as changes in shrub extension and density in hydrological models, to capture their impact on blowing snow redistribution and sublimation, and canopy interception and sublimation of snow, something neglected by current studies. This study demonstrated that increasing shrub extension and density near the Arctic treeline slightly compensates the historical decrease in mean annual discharge produced by the decreasing precipitation, providing a small degree of hydrological resiliency. Historical change analysis revealed that hydrological processes are decelerating near the Arctic treeline, such as decreasing evapotranspiration, soil moisture, sublimation and streamflow, mostly driven by climate change. However, under sufficient climate change (38% and 6.1 °C increase in mean annual precipitation and temperature, respectively) significant hydrological changes are expected, reversing the simulated historical changes. Projections show a significant increase in mean annual streamflow discharge, shortening of the snowcover seasons, deepening of the active layer thickness, increasing peak snow accumulation and earlier and larger peak streamflow. Whilst specific to one basin, they indicate the nature of hydrological changes facing Arctic hydrology. These changes will have significant impacts on ecosystems, infrastructure, landscape evolution and atmospheric feedbacks, which are required to be properly understood and quantified to design sustainable and effective mitigation and adaptation plans. The analyses and discussions presented in this study to diagnose the past and predict future Arctic hydrology are relevant for the scientific community of hydrologists, engineers, water managers and policy makers, particularly those interested in cold regions.
author2 Pomeroy, John
Martz, Lawrence
de Boer, Dirk
Pietroniro, Alain
Guo, Xulin
format Thesis
author Krogh Navarro, Sebastian Alberto 1987-
author_facet Krogh Navarro, Sebastian Alberto 1987-
author_sort Krogh Navarro, Sebastian Alberto 1987-
title Past and Future Hydrology Near the Arctic Treeline
title_short Past and Future Hydrology Near the Arctic Treeline
title_full Past and Future Hydrology Near the Arctic Treeline
title_fullStr Past and Future Hydrology Near the Arctic Treeline
title_full_unstemmed Past and Future Hydrology Near the Arctic Treeline
title_sort past and future hydrology near the arctic treeline
publisher University of Saskatchewan
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/10388/11807
geographic Arctic
Yukon
geographic_facet Arctic
Yukon
genre Active layer thickness
Arctic Basin
Arctic
Climate change
permafrost
Yukon
genre_facet Active layer thickness
Arctic Basin
Arctic
Climate change
permafrost
Yukon
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10388/11807
TC-SSU-11807
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