Western water and climate change

被引:0
|
作者
Dettinger, Michael [1 ]
Udall, Bradley [2 ]
Georgakakos, Aris [3 ]
机构
[1] US Geol Survey, Scripps Inst Oceanog, La Jolla, CA 92037 USA
[2] Colorado State Univ, Colorado Water Inst, Boulder, CO 80523 USA
[3] Georgia Inst Technol, Georgia Water Resources Inst, Atlanta, GA 30332 USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
Centennial Paper; climate change; Colorado River; Klamath River; Rio Grande; Sacramento-San Joaquin Bay Delta; water resources; western United States; UPPER KLAMATH LAKE; COLORADO-RIVER; UNITED-STATES; SNOWPACK TRENDS; GLACIER CHANGE; RIO-GRANDE; PRECIPITATION; FUTURE; DROUGHT; TEMPERATURE;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
The western United States is a region long defined by water challenges. Climate change adds to those historical challenges, but does not, for the most part, introduce entirely new challenges; rather climate change is likely to stress water supplies and resources already in many cases stretched to, or beyond, natural limits. Projections are for continued and, likely, increased warming trends across the region, with a near certainty of continuing changes in seasonality of snowmelt and streamflows, and a strong potential for attendant increases in evaporative demands. Projections of future precipitation are less conclusive, although likely the northernmost West will see precipitation increases while the southernmost West sees declines. However, most of the region lies in a broad area where some climate models project precipitation increases while others project declines, so that only increases in precipitation uncertainties can be projected with any confidence. Changes in annual and seasonal hydrographs are likely to challenge water managers, users, and attempts to protect or restore environmental flows, even where annual volumes change little. Other impacts from climate change (e.g., floods and water-quality changes) are poorly understood and will likely be location dependent. In this context, four iconic river basins offer glimpses into specific challenges that climate change may bring to the West. The Colorado River is a system in which overuse and growing demands are projected to be even more challenging than climate-change-induced flow reductions. The Rio Grande offers the best example of how climate-change-induced flow declines might sink a major system into permanent drought. The Klamath is currently projected to face the more benign precipitation future, but fisheries and irrigation management may face dire straits due to warming air temperatures, rising irrigation demands, and warming waters in a basin already hobbled by tensions between endangered fisheries and agricultural demands. Finally, California's Bay-Delta system is a remarkably localized and severe weakness at the heart of the region's trillion-dollar economy. It is threatened by the full range of potential climate-change impacts expected across the West, along with major vulnerabilities to increased flooding and rising sea levels.
引用
收藏
页码:2069 / 2093
页数:25
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Water and climate in the western United States
    Beyer, PJ
    JOURNAL OF REGIONAL SCIENCE, 2004, 44 (03) : 621 - 623
  • [42] Climate and climate change in western Canada as simulated by the Canadian regional climate model
    Laprise, R
    Caya, D
    Giguere, M
    Bergeron, G
    Boer, GJ
    McFarlane, NA
    ATMOSPHERE-OCEAN, 1998, 36 (02) : 119 - 167
  • [43] CLIMATE CHANGE AND CULTURAL HERITAGE IN WESTERN MONGOLIA
    Post, Jennifer C.
    LEONARDO, 2018, 51 (03) : 285 - 286
  • [44] Climate change impact and response in Western Australia
    Hipkins, Max
    AUSTRALIAN PLANNER, 2008, 45 (04) : 12 - 17
  • [45] Winds of Change: Religion and Climate in the Western Himalayas
    Halperin, Ehud
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY OF RELIGION, 2017, 85 (01) : 64 - 111
  • [46] Climate-change studies in the western Himalaya
    Shekhar, M. S.
    Chand, H.
    Kumar, S.
    Srinivasan, K.
    Ganju, A.
    ANNALS OF GLACIOLOGY, 2010, 51 (54) : 105 - 112
  • [47] Climate Change and Western Development:Policies and Actions
    QIN YUCAI director of the Western Development Department of the National Development and Reform Commission.
    China Today, 2010, (11) : 34 - 36
  • [48] Western forests, fire risk, and climate change
    不详
    FORESTRY CHRONICLE, 2004, 80 (03): : 326 - 326
  • [49] Climate change risks to water security: Exploring the interplay between climate change, water theft, and water (in)security
    Asakaa, Jeremiah Ogonda
    Argomedob, Daniel Weisz
    Jones, Nathan P.
    WATER POLICY, 2024, 26 (04) : 359 - 380
  • [50] Impact of Climate Change in the Banat Plain, Western Romania, on the Accessibility of Water for Crop Production in Agriculture
    Smuleac, Laura
    Rujescu, Ciprian
    Smuleac, Adrian
    Imbrea, Florin
    Radulov, Isidora
    Manea, Dan
    Ienciu, Anisoara
    Adamov, Tabita
    Pascalau, Raul
    AGRICULTURE-BASEL, 2020, 10 (10): : 1 - 24