Abstract

Snow plays a major role in the hydrological cycle. Variations in snow duration and timing can have a negative impact on water resources. Excluding predicted changes in snowmelt rates and amounts could result in deleterious infrastructure, military mission, and asset impacts at military bases across the US. A change in snowpack can also lead to water shortages, which in turn can affect the availability of irrigation water. We performed trend analyses of air temperature, snow water equivalent (SWE) at 22 SNOTEL stations, and streamflow extremes for selected rivers in the snow-dependent and heavily irrigated Yakima River Basin (YRB) located in the Pacific Northwest US. There was a clear trend of increasing air temperature in this study area over a 30 year period (water years 1991–2020). All stations indicated an increase in average air temperatures for December (0.97 °C/decade) and January (1.12 °C/decade). There was also an upward trend at most stations in February (0.28 °C/decade). In December–February, the average air temperatures were 0.82 °C/decade. From these trends, we estimate that, by 2060, the average air temperatures for December–February at most (82%) stations will be above freezing. Furthermore, analysis of SWE from selected SNOTEL stations indicated a decreasing trend in historical SWE, and a shift to an earlier peak SWE was also assumed to be occurring due of the shorter snow duration. Decreasing trends in snow duration, rain-on-snow, and snowmelt runoff also resulted from snow modeling simulations of the YRB and the nearby area. We also observed a shift in the timing of snowmelt-driven peak streamflow, as well as a statistically significant increase in winter maximum streamflow and decrease in summer maximum and minimum streamflow trends by 2099. From the streamflow trends and complementary GEV analysis, we show that the YRB basin is a system in transition with earlier peak flows, lower snow-driven maximum streamflow, and higher rainfall-driven summer streamflow. This study highlights the importance of looking at changes in snow across multiple indicators to develop future infrastructure and planning tools to better adapt and mitigate changes in extreme events.

Highlights

  • Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.About one-sixth of the world’s population is dependent on seasonal snowpacks and glaciers for water resources [1]

  • To project future streamflow changes, we focused on representative concentration pathway (RCP) 8.5 regional and earth system models scenarios, extracted from the Coordinated Regional Downscaling Experiment (CORDEX) [45]

  • To investigate regions vulnerable to changes in water storage and availability, as well as future increases in air temperatures, monthly and seasonal air temperature trends for each snow telemetry (SNOTEL) site and Yakima Airport were calculated for water year (WY) 1991–2020

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Summary

Introduction

About one-sixth of the world’s population is dependent on seasonal snowpacks and glaciers for water resources [1]. There is mounting evidence that the Northern Hemisphere is experiencing changes in snowpack characteristics [2,3,4,5,6,7]. More recent studies indicate that snowpacks are continuing to change in subarctic, Arctic, alpine, and mid-latitude regions [8,9,10]. For the period of 1980 to 2018, Pulliainen et al [11] reported a decreasing trend of annual maximum snow mass for the Northern Hemisphere.

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