Abstract

The southern mountainous taiga region of eastern Siberia is the runoff source area of the basins of the rivers Lena and Amur, where snowmelt discharge is an important hydrological process. To evaluate the effect of the sparse larch forest canopy on snow ablation and energy balance in the snow-pack, meteorological conditions and snow ablation were observed in a larch forest (LF) and an open field (OP). At the beginning of snowmelt, the snow water equivalent was 54.4 and 95.5 mm at OP and LF, respectively. The snow disappeared at LF three days later than at OP. Sublimation accounted for about 8% of snow ablation at both sites from 1 April to 5 May 2002, the snowmelt period. The energy balance of the snowpack at the two sites was dominated by the net all-wave radiation onto the snow surface. The difference in snowmelt between the sites was primarily caused by a difference in the net all-wave radiation. Snow surface albedo correlated with snow surface density for densities from 150 to 350 kg m−3 at both sites.

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