Projected increases and shifts in rain-on-snow flood risk over western North America

被引:0
|
作者
Keith N. Musselman
Flavio Lehner
Kyoko Ikeda
Martyn P. Clark
Andreas F. Prein
Changhai Liu
Mike Barlage
Roy Rasmussen
机构
[1] University of Colorado Boulder,Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research
[2] The National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) ,undefined
来源
Nature Climate Change | 2018年 / 8卷
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Destructive and costly flooding can occur when warm storm systems deposit substantial rain on extensive snowcover1–6, as observed in February 2017 with the Oroville Dam crisis in California7. However, decision-makers lack guidance on how such rain-on-snow (ROS) flood risk may respond to climate change. Here, daily ROS events with flood-generating potential8 are simulated over western North America for a historical (2000–2013) and future (forced under Representative Concentration Pathway 8.59) period with the Weather Research and Forecasting model; 4 km resolution allows the basin-scale ROS flood risk to be assessed. In the warmer climate, we show that ROS becomes less frequent at lower elevations due to snowpack declines, particularly in warmer areas (for example, the Pacific maritime region). By contrast, at higher elevations where seasonal snowcover persists, ROS becomes more frequent due to a shift from snowfall to rain. Accordingly, the water available for runoff10 increases for 55% of western North American river basins, with corresponding increases in flood risk of 20–200%, the greatest changes of which are projected for the Sierra Nevada, the Colorado River headwaters and the Canadian Rocky Mountains. Thus, flood control and water resource planning must consider ROS to fully quantify changes in flood risk with anthropogenic warming.
引用
收藏
页码:808 / 812
页数:4
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Trends and spatial variations of rain-on-snow events over the high Mountain Asia
    Yang, Tao
    Li, Qian
    Hamdi, Rafiq
    Chen, Xi
    Zou, Qiang
    Cui, Fengqi
    De Maeyer, Philippe
    Li, Lanhai
    [J]. JOURNAL OF HYDROLOGY, 2022, 614
  • [22] Impact of North America snow cover on tropical cyclogenesis over the western North Pacific
    Cao, Xi
    Wu, Renguang
    Sun, Ying
    Wang, Zhibiao
    Dai, Yifeng
    Song, Lei
    Lan, Xiaoqing
    Zhang, Xiping
    [J]. ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 2021, 16 (12)
  • [23] Trends and spatial variations of rain-on-snow events over the high Mountain Asia
    Yang, Tao
    Li, Qian
    Hamdi, Rafiq
    Chen, Xi
    Zou, Qiang
    Cui, Fengqi
    De Maeyer, Philippe
    Li, Lanhai
    [J]. JOURNAL OF HYDROLOGY, 2022, 614
  • [25] Retrospective analysis of a nonforecasted rain-on-snow flood in the Alps - a matter of model limitations or unpredictable nature?
    Roessler, O.
    Froidevaux, P.
    Boerst, U.
    Rickli, R.
    Martius, O.
    Weingartner, R.
    [J]. HYDROLOGY AND EARTH SYSTEM SCIENCES, 2014, 18 (06) : 2265 - 2285
  • [26] Large-scale analysis of changing frequencies of rain-on-snow events with flood-generation potential
    Dept. of Hydrology, University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany
    [J]. Hydrol. Earth Syst. Sci., 7 (2695-2709):
  • [27] Large-scale analysis of changing frequencies of rain-on-snow events with flood-generation potential
    Freudiger, D.
    Kohn, I.
    Stahl, K.
    Weiler, M.
    [J]. HYDROLOGY AND EARTH SYSTEM SCIENCES, 2014, 18 (07) : 2695 - 2709
  • [28] The Impacts of Changing Winter Warm Spells on Snow Ablation Over Western North America
    Scaff, Lucia
    Krogh, Sebastian A.
    Musselman, Keith
    Harpold, Adrian
    Li, Yanping
    Lillo-Saavedra, Mario
    Oyarzun, Ricardo
    Rasmussen, Roy
    [J]. WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH, 2024, 60 (05)
  • [29] Simulating snowmelt processes during rain-on-snow over a semi-arid mountain basin
    Marks, D
    Link, T
    Winstral, A
    Garen, D
    [J]. ANNALS OF GLACIOLOGY, VOL 32, 2001, 2001, 32 : 195 - 202
  • [30] Trends in snow ablation over North America
    Dyer, Jamie L.
    Mote, Thomas L.
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLIMATOLOGY, 2007, 27 (06) : 739 - 748