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Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier

Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier

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Page 1: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier

Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to

the Arctic Ocean

Hydro Group Seminar, May 5

Jennifer Adam

Dennis Lettenmaier

Page 2: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier

Study Domain

Mean Annual Air Temperature, C-18 -12 -6 0 6

Lena

Yenisey

Ob’

Study Period

1930-2000

Indigirka

Severnaya Dvina

Page 3: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier

Observed Stream Flow Trends

• Discharge to Arctic Ocean from six largest Eurasian rivers is increasing, 1936 to 1998: +128 km3/yr (~7% increase)

• Most significant trends during the winter (low-flow) season

• Purpose of study: to investigate what is causing this

Dis

cha

rge,

km

3/y

r Annual trend for the 6 largest rivers

Peterson et al. 2002

J F M A M J J A S O N D

10

20

30

40

Dis

cha

rge,

m3/s

GRDCMonthly Means Ob’

1950 1960 1970 1980

Dis

cha

rge,

km

3

Winter Trend, Ob’

Page 4: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier

• Currently experiencing system-wide change: All subsystems affected!

– Rivers, temperature, precipitation, permafrost, snow, wetlands, glaciers, vegetation zonation, fire frequency, insect infestations…

Climate and the Arctic

• Implications to global climate:(1) Albedo feedback

(2) Greenhouse gas emissions/uptake

(3) Ocean circulation feedback

Page 5: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier

www.noaa.gov

Thermohaline Circulation(heat) (salt)

Freshening of the Arctic Ocean deep water formation in the Northern Atlantic slowed-down or “turned-off”

Page 6: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier

Stream Flow Trend Attribution

• Hypothesized contributors –1.Acceleration of the hydrologic cycle:

P , E?2.Permafrost Degradation: dS/dt , E?3.Reservoir Operation: dS/dt?, E? 4. Other: fires, land use, wetlands, clouds, …

• Published authors to date all say, “we don’t know”: McClelland et al. (2004), Berezovskaya et al. (2004), Pavelsky and Smith (2006)…

• Water Balance:dS

P Q Edt

Storage,S:

ground water/ice, lakes, surface

ice…

? ? ?

Page 7: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier

Permafrost Primer

Frozen

Frozen

Unfrozen

Unfrozen

Permafrost:Coldest climates

Seasonally Frozen Ground:Moderate to Cold climates

Active Layer Depth (ALD)The hydrologically active layer

Warming can cause the ALD to increase and/or the extent of permafrost to decrease – both affect runoff generation

Page 8: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier

Affects of Permafrost Change on Stream Flow

• Seasonal effects:– Increased ALD, delay of freeze-up

Increase in late fall/winter stream flow?

• Annual increase via melt of excess ground ice: ice in excess of the volume

of the soil pores had the soil been unfrozen

* massive ice

* flakes or thin layers

* expanded soil pores

Page 9: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier

Lena: 100% permafrost (all types)

Yenisey: 89% permafrost (all types)

Ob’: 26% permafrost (all types)

Permafrost Distribution

Continuous , 90-100%Discontinuous, 50-90%Sporadic, 10-50%

Seasonally Frozen GroundIsolated, <10%

Brown et al. 1998

Page 10: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier

Annual Air Temperature/Stream Flow Correlation

Discontinuous Permafrost, %0 5 10 15 20

T/Q

Cor

rela

tion 0.4

0.2

0.0

-0.2

-0.4

-15 -10 -5 0Air Temperature, C

T/Q

Cor

rela

tion 0.4

0.2

0.0

-0.2

-0.4

(+) Correlation

(-) Correlation

COLD: no T control on Q

THRESHOLD: T control through permafrost melt

WARM: T control through Evapotranspiration

Page 11: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier

Annual Precipitation/Stream Flow Correlation

• “P-PET” is indicator of ΔE sensitivity to ΔP

• (P-PET) << 0 indicates high sensitivity, therefore ΔP contributes more towards ΔE than ΔQ, and P/Q correlation is low

• linear relationship for “warm” basins indicates few dS/dt effects

• scattered points for other basins (not shown) indicates more significant dS/dt effects

ΔE sensitivity to ΔP

ΔQ sensitivity to ΔP

Page 12: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier

Hypothesis FormulationCOLD: no T control on Q

ΔE ~ 0 ?

ΔdS/dt ~ 0

ΔP ~ ΔQ

THRESHOLD: T control through permafrost melt

ΔE ?

ΔdS/dt < 0, according to amount of “threshold”

ΔP < ΔQ

WARM: T control through Evapotranspiration

ΔE = f (ΔP , ΔT , P-PET)

ΔdS/dt ~ 0

│ΔP │ > │ ΔQ │, depending on ΔT, P-PET

permafrost

Page 13: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier

• Selection of trend test:

* Sensitive to seasonal differences in trend

• Varying periods between 1936 and 1998• Test for 99% significance, two-tailed• Calculate trends for precipitation,

temperature, and stream flow (gauged and reconstructed (McClelland et al. 2004))

Trend Analysis

Linear Regression

Mann-Kendall/ Sen Slope

Seasonal* Mann-Kendall/Sen

Slope

Annual Data Annual Data Monthly Data

Normally distributed

Non-parametric Non-parametric

Page 14: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier

Temperature Trends, 99%

Precipitation Trends, 99%

mm/yearC/year

Lena

Yenisey

Ob’

Sec

onda

ry B

asin

s

Page 15: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier

Stream Flow Trends, 99%

Len

a

Ob’

Ye

nise

y

Aldan (Lena)

Lena (head)

S. Dvina

Ob’ (head)

Indigirka

mm/year

Page 16: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier

Precipitation Trends (for periods with stream flow 99%)

Len

a

Ob’

Ye

nise

y

Aldan (Lena)

Lena (head)

S. Dvina

Ob’ (head)

Indigirka

mm/year

Page 17: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier

Str

eam

Flo

w T

rend

, m

m/y

r

Precipitation Trend, mm/yr

Stream Flow/Precipitation Trends

Gauged

Recon.

Gauged

Lena(1)Reservoir

(2)Precipitation

(3)Permafrost?

(4)ET?

Yenisey(1)Permafrost

(2)Reservoir

(3)Precipitation?

Ob’(1)Precipitation

(2)ET

(3)Reservoir?

Aldan (Lena)

(1)Permafrost

(2)Precipitation?

Lena (head)

(1)Precipitation

Severnaya

Dvina(1)Precipitation

(2)ET?

Page 18: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier

Basin Most Likely ControlsLena Reservoir, Precipitation, Permafrost, ET?,

other?

Yenisey Permafrost, Reservoirs, Precipitation?

Ob’ Precipitation, Reservoirs?, ET?

Indigirka other and Precipitation (little change)

Aldan (Lena) Permafrost, Precipitation?

Lena (head) Precipitation, Permafrost?, other?

Nizhn. (Yenisey)

? (change is small)

Pod. (Yenisey)

Precipitation and other (ET?)

Ob’ (head) Precipitation (and Reservoir?)

Irtish (Ob’) Precipitation and other (ET?, Reservoirs?)

Tobol (Ob’) ? (change is small)

S. Dvina Precipitation and other (ET?)

Page 19: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier

Lena at Kusur

Vilyuy at Khatyrik-Khomo

Vilyuy at Chernyshevskiy

Vilyuiskoe Reservoir

Reservoir filling: 1966-1970

Page 20: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier

Q Differences: (1970-1994)-(1959-1966)(post-dam) – (pre-dam)

-6000

-4000

-2000

0

2000

4000

cu

bic

me

ter

pe

r s

ec

on

d

Dam

Vilyuy

Lena

Page 21: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier

Modeling Application

Su et al. 2005

• VIC 4.1.0 r3

• Lakes

• Frozen soil

• Blowing snow

• EASE 100 km

• Calibration / Validation:

• Su et al. 2005

• river discharge, snow cover extent, ice freeze-up/break-up, ALD (with problems)

Page 22: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier
Page 23: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier

Simulated Q Trend ValidationLena

Yenisey

Ob’

ObservedSimulated

Naturalized

• VIC land surface hydrology model – complete water and energy balance

• Controls handled:

(1)Precipitation: YES

(2)Temperature on evaporation: YES

(3)Temperature on Permafrost: SOON

(4) Reservoirs: NO

Ann

ual S

trea

m F

low

, 10

3 m

3 /s

Page 24: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier

Simulated Stream Flow Trends, 99%

Len

a

Ob’

Ye

nise

y

Aldan (Lena)

Lena (head)

S. Dvina

Ob’ (head)

Indigirka

mm/year

Page 25: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier

Observed Stream Flow Trends, 99%

Len

a

Ob’

Ye

nise

y

Aldan (Lena)

Lena (head)

S. Dvina

Ob’ (head)

Indigirka

mm/year

Page 26: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier

Gauged

Recon.

Gauged

Obs

erve

d T

rend

, m

m/y

r

Simulated Trend, mm/yr

Observed/Simulated Stream Flow Trends

Lena: X

Ob’: ~

Ob’(head): ~Irtish:

S. Dvina: ~

Page 27: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier

Study Domain

Mean Annual Air Temperature, C-18 -12 -6 0 6

Lena

Yenisey

Ob’

Study Period

1930-2000

Indigirka

Severnaya Dvina

Page 28: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier

Ob’: 1950 to 1980 and S. Dvina: 1960-1995

Page 29: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier

Ob’ 1950 - 1980

Page 30: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier

Severnaya Dvina 1960 - 1995

Page 31: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier

ΔQ

Fraction Explained

by ΔP

Fraction Explained

by ΔE

Fraction Explained by ΔdS/dt

Page 32: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier

Historical P/T

Variability

Historical P Variability /

Climatology T

Historical T Variability /

Climatology P

Page 33: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier

• Cherkauer finite difference algorithm

• solving of thermal fluxes through soil column

• infiltration/runoff response adjusted to account for effects of soil ice content

• parameterization for frost spatial distribution

• tracks multiple freeze/thaw layers

• can use either “no flux” or “constant flux” bottom boundary

current set-up:

• constant flux – damping depth of 4m, Tb defined as annual ave air temperature, 15 nodes utilized

• spatial frost turned on

Page 34: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier

“Noflux” On• Motivation: Bottom boundary temperature no longer constrained – model is free to predict this as well as how this responds to various changes in climate, ground cover, and soil state.

• Necessitates deepening simulation depth to ~3x the annual damping depth (so, needs to be 10-20m)

• For nodes below bottom of third soil layer, total moisture derived from bottom soil moisture layer

Dp = 4 m, Tb(init) = -12 °C Dp = 15 m, Tb(init) = -3 °C

Tem

pera

ture

, °C

Page 35: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier

Tb Sensitivity to Tb(init): therefore init at zero, spin-up full 70 years at 1930’s

climatology

Page 36: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier

Effect of exponential node distributions (18 nodes, 15 m)

Time (one year)

Dep

th

Linear Exponential

Page 37: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier

Use of Russian Soil Temperature Data (Zhang, NSIDC)

Page 38: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier

Dep

th,

m

Temperature, °C

• temporal: 1800’s through 1990, but not continuous

• monthly data

• depths: 2cm, 5cm, 10cm, 15cm, 20 cm, 30 cm, 80 cm, 1.6 m, 3.2 m

• Simulated versus observed soil temperatures, Ob’ station for 9/1960, linear node distribution (18 nodes, dp = 15m, tb,init = zero)

Page 39: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier

Month

Tem

pera

ture

, °C

• Yenisey stations

• mean monthly biases

• bias varies with month and with depth

Page 40: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier

Global Soil Moisture Database (Robock)

From other datasets:

• snow depth

• soil temperature

• air temp, precip

• radiation data

Two sites selected for detailed analysis – red circles

Page 41: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier

0-10 cm

0-20 cm

0-50 cm

0-100 cm

Page 42: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier

Excess Ground Ice in VIC(ice in excess of the volume of the soil

pores had the soil been unfrozen)

• Segregation Ice: • the first to respond to warming (i.e. usually exists in expanded soil pores – most often in clays)• Initialize model with ice-filled expanded soil pores

• according to ground ice content maps• as ice thaws due to climatic warming, allow the soil pores to collapse to natural state by updating porosity (and accounting for 9% volume change from liquid to solid)

• Intrusive Ice:• can be found as massive ice – often the last and slowest response to warming• add a soil layer of pure ice to VIC

Page 43: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier

Ground Ice Conditions

Page 44: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier

Ongoing Modeling Foci• Off-line macro-scale hydrologic land surface

modeling

- Explore contributions to stream flow trends outside permafrost regions (Ob, S. Dvina)

- Problems with permafrost simulations identified:

(1)Needs dynamic bottom boundary temperatures (at soil damping depth)

(2)Investigate using observed soil (and other) data

(3)Needs incorporation of excess ground ice

• Stream Flow Predictions – using downscaled GCM output

Page 45: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier

Questions?

Page 46: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier
Page 47: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier

Parameter

Aldan (Basin 5) Irtish (Basin 10)

Baseline Adjusted Diff. Baseline Adjusted Difference

binf 0.003 0.003 0 0.025 0.027 0.002

d1 0.003 0.004 0.001 0.025 0.029 0.004

d2 0.003 0.004 0.001 0.025 0.007 -0.018

d3 0.003 0.003 0 0.025 0.024 -0.001

Dsmax 0.003 0.003 0 0.025 0.024 -0.001

Ws 0.003 0.004 0.001 0.025 0.022 -0.003

Ds 0.003 0.003 0 0.025 0.024 -0.001

Acknowledgements: Xiaogang Shi

Sensitivity of Q Trend to Calibration Parameters

Page 48: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier

sn

kks SS

1

1

1 1

)sgn(k kn

i

n

ijjkikk XXS

)var(

)sgn(

s

ss

S

SSZ

1

1 11

218

)52)(1()var(

s ss n

i

n

ijij

n

k

kkks

nnnS

ji

XXD jkikijk

for all pairs ),( jkik XX

(normally distributed, mean of zero)

snk 1 , and knji 1

. )( ijkDmedianB

where

Seasonal Mann-Kendall

Calculation of Slope Estimator, B:

Page 49: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier
Page 50: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier

Stream Flow Data

UW Data Development

mm

/yea

r

Lena

monthly climatology

long-term variability

short-term variability

++

Reconstructed Gauged 1940 1960 1980 2000

Lena300

200mm

/yea

r

80

40

0mm

/mon

th

3 6 9 12

Precipitation DataLena

1940 1960 1980 2000

600

400

mm

/yea

r

100500m

m/m

onth

Gauge-Based UW (gauge-based) Reanalysis

3 6 9 12

Page 51: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier
Page 52: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier

High Quality Precipitation

Stations

High Quality Temperature

Stations

Page 53: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier
Page 54: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier

ID

Precipitation (mm year-1) Temperature (°C year-1)

UDel UW UDel UW

1 98% 0.42 NA 0.24 NA -0.006 NA -0.010

2 NA 0.12 NA -0.08 NA 0.002 95% 0.011

3 NA 0.41 NA 0.23 NA 0.007 95% 0.014

4 NA -0.14 NA -0.32 NA -0.005 NA -0.005

5 99% 0.91 98% 0.68 NA -0.002 NA -0.010

6 NA 0.22 NA 0.11 NA -0.004 NA -0.006

7 NA 0.62 NA 0.40 NA -0.005 NA 0.006

8 NA 0.36 NA 0.11 NA -0.001 NA 0.011

9 NA 0.43 NA 0.19 NA 0.010 95% 0.012

10 NA 0.34 NA 0.19 95% 0.013 99% 0.020

11 NA 0.41 NA 0.34 NA 0.010 90% 0.014

12 NA 0.12 NA 0.28 NA -0.003 NA 0.001

Page 55: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier

Stream Flow/Precipitation Trend Compatibility

can be explained by Observed Precipitation

can be explained by Reanalysis Precipitation

cannot be explained by any Precipitation Product

Lena Ob’Yenisey

0%

100%

Gau

ged

Rec

onst

ruct

ed

0%

100%

Fre

quen

cy o

f P

erio

ds

Page 56: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier
Page 57: Trend Attribution of Eurasian River Discharge to the Arctic Ocean Hydro Group Seminar, May 5 Jennifer Adam Dennis Lettenmaier