Modeling Forest Snow Using Relative Canopy Structure Metrics

Author:

Moeser C. David1,Sexstone Graham2,Kurzweil Jake3

Affiliation:

1. U.S. Geological Survey, New Mexico Water Science Center, Albuquerque, NM 87113, USA

2. U.S. Geological Survey, Colorado Water Science Center, Lakewood, CO 80225, USA

3. Mountain Studies Institute, Silverton, CO 81433, USA

Abstract

Snow and watershed models typically do not account for forest structure and shading; therefore, they display substantial uncertainty when attempting to account for forest change or when comparing hydrological response between forests with varying characteristics. This study collected snow water equivalent (SWE) measurements in a snow-dominated forest in Colorado, the United States, with variable canopy structure. The SWE measurements were integrated with 1 m Lidar derived canopy structure metrics and incoming solar radiation to create empirical SWE offset equations for four canopy structure groupings (forest gaps, south-facing forest edges, north-facing forest edges, and the interior forest) that varied in size compared to an open area. These simple equations indirectly integrate terrain shading and canopy shading and were able to estimate 40 to 70% of SWE variation in a heterogenous forested environment. The equations were then applied to a snow melt model with a 100 m grid size by applying the area-weighted average of SWE offsets from the four canopy structure groupings in each model cell. This tiled model configuration allowed for the model to better represent the subgrid heterogeneity of a forest environment that can be seen through an ensemble or range of potential outputs rather than a singular estimate.

Funder

Department of the Interior South Central Climate Adaptation Science Center

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference78 articles.

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2. Furniss, M., Staab, B., Hazelhurst, S., Clifton, C., Roby, K., Ilhadrt, B., and Edwards, P. (2010). Water, Climate Change, and Forests: Watershed Stewardship for a Changing Climate, General Technical Report PNW-GTR812.

3. How much runoff originates as snow in the Western United States, and how will that change in the future?;Li;Geophys. Res. Lett.,2017

4. A multi model ensemble approach to assessment of climate change impacts on the hydrology and water resources of the Colorado River Basin;Christensen;Hydrol. Earth Syst. Sci.,2007

5. Guido, B.Z. (2016, September 05). Mountain Snowpack in the West and Southwest. Available online: https://www.southwestclimatechange.org/impacts/water/snowpack.

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