Dynamics of water fluxes and storages in an Alpine karst catchment under current and potential future climate conditions
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Published:2018-07-18
Issue:7
Volume:22
Page:3807-3823
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ISSN:1607-7938
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Container-title:Hydrology and Earth System Sciences
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Hydrol. Earth Syst. Sci.
Author:
Chen Zhao, Hartmann AndreasORCID, Wagener ThorstenORCID, Goldscheider Nico
Abstract
Abstract. Karst aquifers are difficult to manage due to their unique
hydrogeological characteristics. Future climate projections suggest a strong
change in temperature and precipitation regimes in European karst regions
over the next decades. Alpine karst systems can be especially vulnerable
under changing hydro-meteorological conditions since snowmelt in mountainous
environments is an important controlling process for aquifer recharge and is
highly sensitive to varying climatic conditions. Our paper presents the first
study to investigate potential impacts of climate change on mountainous karst
systems by using a combined lumped and distributed modeling approach with
consideration of subsurface karst drainage structures. The study site is
characterized by high-permeability (karstified) limestone formations and low-permeability
(non-karst) sedimentary Flysch. The model simulation under
current conditions demonstrates that a large proportion of precipitation
infiltrates into the karst aquifer as autogenic recharge. Moreover, the
result shows that surface snow storage is dominant from November to April,
while subsurface water storage in the karst aquifer dominates from May to
October. The climate scenario runs demonstrate that varied climate conditions
significantly affect the spatiotemporal distribution of water fluxes and
storages: (1) the total catchment discharge decreases under all
evaluated future climate conditions. (2) The spatiotemporal discharge
pattern is strongly controlled by temperature variations, which can shift the
seasonal snowmelt pattern, with snow storage in the cold season (December to
April) decreasing significantly under all change scenarios. (3) Increased
karst aquifer recharge in winter and spring, and decreased recharge in summer
and autumn, partly offset each other. (4) Impacts on the karst springs are
distinct; the lowest permanent spring presents a “robust” discharge
behavior, while the highest overflow outlet is highly sensitive to changing
climate. This analysis effectively demonstrates that the impacts on
subsurface flow dynamics are regulated by the characteristic dual flow and
spatially heterogeneous distributed drainage structure of the karst aquifer.
Overall, our study highlights the fast groundwater dynamics in mountainous
karst catchments, which make them highly vulnerable to future changing
climate conditions. Additionally, this work presents a novel holistic
modeling approach, which can be transferred to similar karst systems for
studying the impact of climate change on local karst water resources with
consideration of their individual hydrogeological complexity and hydraulic
heterogeneity.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Engineering,General Environmental Science
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