Abstract

Hydro–climatic variables play an essential role in assessing the long-term changes in streamflow in the snow-fed and glacier-fed rivers that are extremely vulnerable to climatic variations in the alpine mountainous regions. The trend and magnitudinal changes of hydro–climatic variables, such as temperature, precipitation, and streamflow, were determined by applying the non-parametric Mann–Kendall, modified Mann–Kendall, and Sen’s slope tests in the Kofarnihon River Basin in Central Asia. We also used Pettitt’s test to analyze the changes during the 1951–2012 and 1979–2012 time periods. This study revealed that the variations of climate variables have their significant spatial patterns and are strongly regulated by the altitude. From mountainous regions down to plain regions, the decadal temperature trends varied from −0.18 to 0.36 °C/decade and the variation of precipitation from −4.76 to −14.63 mm yr−1 per decade. Considering the temporal variation, the temperature trends decreased in winter and significantly increased in spring, and the precipitation trends significantly decreased in spring but significantly increased in winter in the high-altitude areas. As consequence, total streamflow in headwater regions shows the obvious increase and clear seasonal variations. The mean monthly streamflow decreased in fall and winter and significantly increased in the spring and summer seasons which can be attributed to the influence of global warming on the rapid melting of snow and ice. Although the abrupt change points in air temperature and precipitation occurred around the 1970s and 1990s in the low-altitude areas and 2000s in the high-altitude areas during the 1951–2012 and 1979–2012 periods, the general trends of hydro–climatic variables keep consistent. This study benefits water resource management, socio–economic development, and sustainable agricultural planning in Tajikistan and its downstream countries.

Highlights

  • The mountainous Kofarnihon River Basin (KRB) in Central Asia has a strong local contrast due to its mountainous topography and is considered the most vulnerable territory in Central Asia toWater 2020, 12, 2140; doi:10.3390/w12082140 www.mdpi.com/journal/waterWater 2020, 12, 2140 hydro–climatic changes [1,2]

  • Based on the long-term measured station data in the ungauged Kofarnihon River Basin, the trends and magnitudinal changes of monthly and annual temperature, precipitation, and streamflow were determined by applying the non-parametric Mann–Kendall, modified Mann–Kendall, and Sen’s slope tests

  • The global trend analysis according to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report 2013 was described based on the datasets of CRUTEM, GHCNv3, Goddard Institute of Space Studies (GISS), and Berkeley for the temperature trend; CRUTS, GHCN V2, GPCC V6, and Smith et al for the precipitation trends; and Dai et al [31] and

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Summary

Introduction

The mountainous Kofarnihon River Basin (KRB) in Central Asia has a strong local contrast due to its mountainous topography and is considered the most vulnerable territory in Central Asia toWater 2020, 12, 2140; doi:10.3390/w12082140 www.mdpi.com/journal/waterWater 2020, 12, 2140 hydro–climatic changes [1,2]. The Kofarnihon River (KR), before reaching the Amu Darya River, runs through the capital city of Tajikistan and several high populated districts where people acquire drinking water and irrigate their lands from the KR. In the upstream tributary of the Kofarnihon River, three medium-sized run-of-river hydropower plants (HPPs) and several small size HPPs operate. This river irrigates 44,958 hectares of land in Tajikistan [3]. Regional climates are sharpened by these essential ecosystem services. These ecosystems are at risk of anthropogenic pressures from overwhelming population growth and impacts from global warming, which further lead to alterations in the hydrological cycle and glacier retreats [4,6]. The global warming trend has been obvious during recent decades and relates to the issue of climate change [7]

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