Abstract

Mountain runoff ultimately reflects the difference between precipitation (P) and evapotranspiration (ET), as modulated by biogeophysical mechanisms that intensify or alleviate drought impacts. These modulating mechanisms are seldom measured and not fully understood. The impact of the warm 2012–15 California drought on the heavily instrumented Kings River basin provides an extraordinary opportunity to enumerate four mechanisms that controlled the impact of drought on mountain hydrology. Two mechanisms intensified the impact: (i) evaporative processes have first access to local precipitation, which decreased the fractional allocation of P to runoff in 2012–15 and reduced P-ET by 30% relative to previous years, and (ii) 2012–15 was 1 °C warmer than the previous decade, which increased ET relative to previous years and reduced P-ET by 5%. The other two mechanisms alleviated the impact: (iii) spatial heterogeneity and the continuing supply of runoff from higher elevations increased 2012–15 P-ET by 10% relative to that expected for a homogenous basin, and iv) drought-associated dieback and wildfire thinned the forest and decreased ET, which increased 2016 P-ET by 15%. These mechanisms are all important and may offset each other; analyses that neglect one or more will over or underestimate the impact of drought and warming on mountain runoff.

Details

Title
Mechanisms controlling the impact of multi-year drought on mountain hydrology
Author
Bales, Roger C 1 ; Goulden, Michael L 2 ; Hunsaker, Carolyn T 3 ; Conklin, Martha H 1 ; Hartsough, Peter C 4 ; Anthony T O’Geen 4 ; Hopmans, Jan W 4 ; Safeeq, Mohammad 1 

 Sierra Nevada Research Institute, University of California, 5200 North Lake Road, Merced, CA, USA 
 Department of Earth System Science, University of California, Croul Hall, Irvine, CA, USA 
 USDA Forest Service, Pacific Southwest Research Station, Fresno, CA, USA 
 Department of Land, Air, and Water Resources, University of California, One Shields Avenue, Davis, CA, USA 
Pages
1-8
Publication year
2018
Publication date
Jan 2018
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
e-ISSN
20452322
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1986974146
Copyright
© 2018. This work is published under http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.