Runoff Variability in the Truckee–Carson River Basin from Tree Rings and a Water Balance Model

Author:

Meko David M.1ORCID,Biondi Franco2,Taylor Alan H.3,Panyushkina Irina P.1,Thaxton Richard D.14,Prusevich Alexander A.5,Shiklomanov Alexander I.5,Lammers Richard B.5,Glidden Stanley5

Affiliation:

1. a Laboratory of Tree-Ring Research, The University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona

2. b DendroLab, Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Science, University of Nevada, Reno, Nevada

3. c Department of Geography and Earth and Environmental Systems Institute, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania

4. d Department of Earth and Spatial Sciences, University of Idaho, Moscow, Idaho

5. e Water Systems Analysis Group, Earth Systems Research Center, University of New Hampshire, Durham, New Hampshire

Abstract

Abstract Regional warming and associated changes in hydrologic systems pose challenges to water supply management in river basins of the western United States and call for improved understanding of the spatial and temporal variability of runoff. We apply a network of total width, subannual width, and delta blue intensity tree-ring chronologies in combination with a monthly water balance model to identify droughts and their associated precipitation P and temperature T footprints in the Truckee–Carson River basin (TCRB). Stepwise regression gave reasonably accurate reconstructions, from 1688 to 1999, of seasonal P and T (e.g., R2 = 0.50 for May–September T). These were disaggregated to monthly values, which were then routed through a water balance model to generate “indirectly” reconstructed runoff. Reconstructed and observed annual runoff correlate highly (r = 0.80) from 1906 to 1999. The extended runoff record shows that twentieth-century droughts are unmatched in severity in a 300-yr context. Our water balance modeling reconstruction advances the conventional regression-based dendrochronological methods as it allows for multiple hydrologic components (evapotranspiration, snowmelt, etc.) to be evaluated. We found that imposed warming (3° and 6°C) generally exacerbated the runoff deficits in past droughts but that impact could be lessened and sometimes even reversed in some years by compensating factors, including changes in snow regime. Our results underscore the value of combining multiproxy tree-ring data with water balance modeling to place past hydrologic droughts in the context of climate change. Significance Statement We show how water balance modeling in combination with tree-ring data helps place modern droughts in the context of the past few centuries and a warming climate. Seasonal precipitation and temperature were reconstructed from multiproxy tree-ring data for a mountainous location near Lake Tahoe, and these reconstructions were routed through a water balance model to get a record of monthly runoff, snowmelt, and other water balance variables from 1688 to 1999. The resulting extended annual runoff record highlights the unmatched severity of twentieth-century droughts. A warming of 3°C imposed on reconstructed temperature generally exacerbates the runoff anomalies in past droughts, but this effect is sometimes offset by warming-related changes in the snow regime.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Reference88 articles.

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2. Blue intensity parameters derived from Ponderosa pine tree rings characterize intra-annual density fluctuations and reveal seasonally divergent water limitations;Babst, F.,2016

3. Tree-ring dating of extreme lake levels at the Subarctic–Boreal interface;Bégin, Y.,2001

4. Biondi, F., and S. Strachan, 2012: Dendrohydrology in 2050: Challenges and opportunities. Toward a Sustainable Water Future: Visions for 2050, W. M. Grayman, D. P. Loucks, and L. Saito, Eds., American Society of Civil Engineers, 355–362.

5. Long-term hydroclimatic patterns in the Truckee-Carson basin of the eastern Sierra Nevada, USA;Biondi, F.,2019

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