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DOI10.3390/w11081651
Potential Changes in Runoff of California's Major Water Supply Watersheds in the 21st Century
He, Minxue1; Anderson, Michael1; Schwarz, Andrew2; Das, Tapash3; Lynn, Elissa1; Anderson, Jamie1; Munevar, Armin3; Vasquez, Jordi1; Arnold, Wyatt1
发表日期2019
EISSN2073-4441
卷号11期号:8
英文摘要

This study assesses potential changes in runoff of California's eight major Central Valley water supply watersheds in the 21st century. The study employs the latest operative climate projections from 10 general circulation models (GCMs) of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 5 (CMIP5) under two emission scenarios (RCP 4.5 and RCP 8.5) to drive a hydrologic model (VIC) in generating runoff projections through 2099. Changes in peak runoff, peak timing, seasonal (major water supply season April-July) runoff, and annual runoff during two future periods, mid-century and late-century, relative to a historical baseline period are examined. Trends in seasonal and annual runoff projections are also investigated. The results indicate that watershed characteristics impact runoff responses to climate change. Specifically, for rain-dominated watersheds, runoff is generally projected to peak earlier with higher peak volumes on average. For snow-dominated watersheds, however, runoff is largely projected to peak within the same month as historical runoff has, with little changes in peak volume during mid-century but pronounced decreases during late-century under the higher emission scenario. The study also identifies changes that are common to all study watersheds. Specifically, the temporal distribution of annual runoff is projected to change in terms of shifting more volume to the wet season, though there is no significant changing trend in the total annual runoff. Additionally, the snowmelt portion of the total annual runoff (represented by April-July runoff divided by total annual runoff) is projected to decline consistently under both emission scenarios, indicative of a shrinking snowpack across the study watersheds. Collectively, these changes imply higher flood risk and lower water supply reliability in the future that are expected to pose stress to California's water system. Those findings can inform water management adaptation practices (e.g., watershed restoration, re-operation of the current water system, investing in additional water storage) to cope with the stress.


WOS研究方向Water Resources
来源期刊WATER
文献类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://gcip.llas.ac.cn/handle/2XKMVOVA/101177
作者单位1.Calif Dept Water Resources, 1416 9th St, Sacramento, CA 95814 USA;
2.Delta Stewardship Council, 980 9th St, Sacramento, CA 95814 USA;
3.Jacobs, 402 W Broadway,Suite 1450, San Diego, CA 92101 USA
推荐引用方式
GB/T 7714
He, Minxue,Anderson, Michael,Schwarz, Andrew,et al. Potential Changes in Runoff of California's Major Water Supply Watersheds in the 21st Century[J],2019,11(8).
APA He, Minxue.,Anderson, Michael.,Schwarz, Andrew.,Das, Tapash.,Lynn, Elissa.,...&Arnold, Wyatt.(2019).Potential Changes in Runoff of California's Major Water Supply Watersheds in the 21st Century.WATER,11(8).
MLA He, Minxue,et al."Potential Changes in Runoff of California's Major Water Supply Watersheds in the 21st Century".WATER 11.8(2019).
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