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Climate and streamflow trends in the Columbia River basin: evidence for ecological and engineering resilience to climate change

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Title Climate and streamflow trends in the Columbia River basin: evidence for ecological and engineering resilience to climate change
Names Hatcher, Kendra L. (creator)
Jones, Julia A. (creator)
Date Issued 2013-06-20 (iso8601)
Note This is an author's peer-reviewed final manuscript, as accepted by the publisher. The published article is copyrighted by Taylor & Francis and can be found at: http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/tato20/current#.UkoG0XfVGHc.
Abstract Large river basins integrate the signal of water from atmospheres to oceans. Climate change is
widely expected to alter streamflow and potentially disrupt water management systems. We
tested the ecological resilience -- capacity of headwater ecosystems to sustain streamflow
under climate change – and the engineering resilience – capacity of dam and reservoir
management to overprint a climate change signal – in seven sub-basins of the Columbia River
from 1950 to 2011. Sub-basins had a headwater gage above dams with a long-term streamflow
record and a nearby climate station with a long-term record of air temperature and
precipitation, as well as matching long-term streamflow records at gages downstream of dams.
Trends were fitted to daily data on maximum and minimum temperature, precipitation, and
streamflow over the period of record (mostly 1950-2011). Consistent with predicted
streamflow response to climate warming, annual snowmelt runoff peaks in five of seven
headwaters basins shifted a few days earlier over the period from 1950 to 2010, but changes
were small, displaying ecological resilience. Below dams, streamflow change was attributable to
reservoir operation for flood control (reduced annual peak flows) and irrigation (augmented
late summer low flows), as well as flow management for hydropower, navigation, and
recreation, but predicted streamflow responses to climate change were absent, indicating
engineering resilience. Thus, to date, climate-warming effects on streamflow have been limited
to headwaters, and flow regulation has obscured the expression of climate change on
streamflow below dams in the Columbia River basin.
Genre Article
Topic climate change
Identifier Hatcher, K.L, & Jones, J.A. (2013). Climate and streamflow trends in the Columbia River Basin: Evidence for ecological and engineering resilience to climate change. Atmosphere-Ocean, 51(4), 436-455. doi:10.1080/07055900.2013.808167

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