Sediment load assessments under climate change scenarios - lack of integration between climatologists and environmental modelers

Author:

Szalinska Ewa1,Orlinska-Wozniak Paulina2,Wilk Pawel2,Jakusik Ewa2,Skalak Petr3,Wypych Agnieszka4,Arnold Jeff5

Affiliation:

1. AGH University of Krakow

2. Institute of Meteorology and Water Management - National Research Institute

3. c. Global Change Research Institute of the Czech Academy of Sciences

4. d. Department of Climatology, Jagiellonian University in Krakow

5. e. Agricultural Research Service, United States Department of Agriculture

Abstract

Abstract Increasing precipitation accelerates soil erosion and boosts sediment loads, especially in mountain catchments. Therefore, there is significant pressure to deliver plausible assessments of these phenomena on a local scale under future climate change scenarios. Such assessments are primarily drawn from a combination of climate change projections and environmental model simulations, usually performed by climatologists and environmental modelers independently. Our example shows that without communication from both groups the final results are ambiguous. Here, we estimate sediment loads delivered from a Carpathian catchment to a reservoir to illustrate how the choice of meteorological data, reference period, and model ensemble can affect final results. Differences in future loads could reach up to even 6,000 tons of sediment per year. We postulate there has to be better integration between climatologists and environmental modelers, focusing on introducing multi-model ensembles targeting specific impacts to facilitate an informed choice on climate information.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

Reference58 articles.

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