Abstract

Abstract. Glaciers are essential hydrological reservoirs, storing and releasing water at various timescales. Short-term variability in glacier melt is one of the causes of streamflow droughts, here defined as deficiencies from the flow regime. Streamflow droughts in glacierised catchments have a wide range of interlinked causing factors related to precipitation and temperature on short and long timescales. Climate change affects glacier storage capacity, with resulting consequences for discharge regimes and streamflow drought. Future projections of streamflow drought in glacierised basins can, however, strongly depend on the modelling strategies and analysis approaches applied. Here, we examine the effect of different approaches, concerning the glacier modelling and the drought threshold, on the characterisation of streamflow droughts in glacierised catchments. Streamflow is simulated with the Hydrologiska Byråns Vattenbalansavdelning (HBV-light) model for two case study catchments, the Nigardsbreen catchment in Norway and the Wolverine catchment in Alaska, and two future climate change scenarios (RCP4.5 and RCP8.5). Two types of glacier modelling are applied, a constant and dynamic glacier area conceptualisation. Streamflow droughts are identified with the variable threshold level method and their characteristics are compared between two periods, a historical (1975–2004) and future (2071–2100) period. Two existing threshold approaches to define future droughts are employed: (1) the threshold from the historical period; (2) a transient threshold approach, whereby the threshold adapts every year in the future to the changing regimes. Results show that drought characteristics differ among the combinations of glacier area modelling and thresholds. The historical threshold combined with a dynamic glacier area projects extreme increases in drought severity in the future, caused by the regime shift due to a reduction in glacier area. The historical threshold combined with a constant glacier area results in a drastic decrease of the number of droughts. The drought characteristics between future and historical periods are more similar when the transient threshold is used, for both glacier area conceptualisations. With the transient threshold, factors causing future droughts can be analysed. This study revealed the different effects of methodological choices on future streamflow drought projections and it highlights how the options can be used to analyse different aspects of future droughts: the transient threshold for analysing future drought processes, the historical threshold to assess changes between periods, the constant glacier area to analyse the effect of short-term climate variability on droughts and the dynamic glacier area to model more realistic future discharges under climate change.

Highlights

  • Glaciers and snow packs are an important freshwater resource, supplying water to more than one-sixth of the Earth’s population (Barnett et al, 2005)

  • We focus on two options for glacier modelling in a hydrological model and two different drought threshold approaches resulting in four combinations

  • With the historical variable threshold (HVT), we look at future droughts from a viewpoint and with the transient threshold we change our viewpoint to the future and we look at droughts

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Summary

Introduction

Glaciers and snow packs are an important freshwater resource, supplying water to more than one-sixth of the Earth’s population (Barnett et al, 2005). Drought is defined as a below-normal water availability (Tallaksen and Van Lanen, 2004; Sheffield and Wood, 2012) and streamflow drought ( called hydrological drought) is a drought in river discharge. According to this definition, we defined streamflow droughts in this study as anomalies (or deficiencies) from the hydrological regime, including the important high flow melt season. “glacier melt droughts”, defined as a deficiency in the glacier melt peak and caused by belownormal temperatures in the summer season (Van Loon et al, 2015), can be important to downstream water users

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