Abstract

Abstract. Changes in snowpack and duration of snow cover can cause changes in the regime of snow and rain-snow induced floods. The recent IPCC report suggests that, in snow-dominated regions such as the Alps, the Carpathian Mountains and the northern parts of Europe, spring snowmelt floods may occur earlier in a future climate because of warmer winters, and flood hazards may increase during wetter and warmer winters, with more frequent rain and less frequent snowfall. The monitoring and modelling of snow accumulation and snow melting in mountainous catchments is rather complicated, especially due to the high spatial variability of snow characteristics and the limited availability of terrestrial hydrological data. An evaluation of changes in the snow water equivalent (SWE) during the period of 1961–2010 in the Upper Hron river basin, which is representative of the mountainous regions in Central Slovakia, is provided in this paper. An analysis of the snow cover was performed using simulated values of the snow water equivalent by a conceptual semi-distributed hydrological rainfall-runoff model. Due to the poor availability of the measured snow water equivalent data, the analysis was performed using its simulated values. Modelling of the SWE was performed in different altitude zones by a conceptual semi-distributed hydrological rainfall-runoff model. The evaluation of the results over the past five decades indicates a decrease in the simulated snow water equivalent and the snow duration in each altitude zone and in all months of the winter season. Significant decreasing trends were found for December, January and February, especially in the highest altitude zone.

Highlights

  • A snowpack as natural water storage is a very important part of the hydrological balance in mountainous catchments

  • Due to the poor availability of snow water equivalent data, many studies that aim at detecting changes in snow packs in Slovakia have been based on an analysis of point measurements of snow depths and the duration of snow cover (e.g., Lapin and Faško, 2005, 2007) rather than on the snow water equivalent (SWE)

  • The snow water equivalent evaluated on a catchment scale can provide more complete information about the amount of water contained in snow and is more useful than interpolated snow cover or snow depths for flood prediction and the management of water resources in snow-dominated regions

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Summary

Introduction

A snowpack as natural water storage is a very important part of the hydrological balance in mountainous catchments. Due to the poor availability of snow water equivalent data, many studies that aim at detecting changes in snow packs in Slovakia have been based on an analysis of point measurements of snow depths and the duration of snow cover (e.g., Lapin and Faško, 2005, 2007) rather than on the snow water equivalent (SWE). In this paper we evaluated the changes in the snow water equivalent in a mountainous basin in Slovakia using the modelled values of the SWE during the period of 1961– 2010. The validation of the simulated SWE values was provided by comparing them with the available measured data of the snow water equivalent in each altitude zone.

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