Incorporating Climate Nonstationarity and Snowmelt Processes in Intensity–Duration–Frequency Analyses with Case Studies in Mountainous Areas

Author:

Hou Zhangshuan1ORCID,Ren Huiying1,Sun Ning1,Wigmosta Mark S.1,Liu Ying2,Leung L. Ruby2,Yan Hongxiang1,Skaggs Richard1,Coleman Andre1

Affiliation:

1. Hydrology, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Richland, Washington

2. Earth Systems Analysis and Modeling, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Richland, Washington

Abstract

Abstract Downscaled high-resolution climate simulations were used to provide inputs to the physics-based Distributed Hydrology Soil Vegetation Model (DHSVM), which accounts for the combined effects of snowmelt and rainfall processes, to determine spatially distributed available water for runoff (AWR). After quasi-stationary time windows were identified based on model outputs extracted for two different mountainous field sites in Colorado and California, intensity–duration–frequency (IDF) curves for precipitation and AWR were generated and evaluated at each numerical grid to provide guidance on hydrological infrastructure design. Impacts of snowmelt are found to be spatially variable due to spatial heterogeneity associated with topography according to geostatistical analyses. AWR extremes have stronger spatial continuity compared to precipitation. Snowmelt impacts on AWR are more pronounced at the wet California site than at the semiarid Colorado site. The sensitivities of AWR and precipitation IDFs to increasing greenhouse gas emissions are found to be localized and spatially variable. In subregions with significant snowfall, snowmelt can result in an AWR (e.g., 6-h 100-yr events) that is 70% higher than precipitation. For comparison, future greenhouse gas emissions may increase 6-h 100-yr precipitation and AWR by up to 50% and 80%, respectively, toward the end of this century.

Funder

Strategic Environmental Research and Development Program

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

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