Observed Spatiotemporal Changes in the Mechanisms of Extreme Water Available for Runoff in the Western United States

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Abstract

This paper presents the first study to identity, in historical records, regional changes in the mechanisms of extreme water available for runoff (W). We used a quality-controlled Snowpack Telemetry data set (1979–2017) combined with the nonparametric regional Kendall test to examine changes in annual maximum W under four hydrometeorological conditions (melt only/rain-on-snow/all melt/all melt plus rainfall) over the mountainous regions of the western United States. Under a warming climate, our analyses indicated significant declining trends in annual maximum W at regional scale under all four conditions. The annual maximum of all melt plus rainfall decreased significantly by 15% in the southwestern United States, while the frequency of rain-on-snow events increased significantly by 32% in the northwestern United States. The annual maximum snowmelt only decreased significantly by 21% across the entire western United States. Our results confirmed that interaction between regional humidity and solar radiation with warming temperature helps drive these changes.

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Yan, H., Sun, N., Wigmosta, M., Skaggs, R., Leung, L. R., Coleman, A., & Hou, Z. (2019). Observed Spatiotemporal Changes in the Mechanisms of Extreme Water Available for Runoff in the Western United States. Geophysical Research Letters, 46(2), 767–775. https://doi.org/10.1029/2018GL080260

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