The West’s declining snowpack: is global warming to blame? Philip Mote Climate Impacts Group...

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The West’s declining The West’s declining snowpack: is global snowpack: is global warming to blame? warming to blame? Philip Mote Climate Impacts Group University of Washington
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Page 1: The West’s declining snowpack: is global warming to blame? Philip Mote Climate Impacts Group University of Washington.

The West’s declining The West’s declining snowpack: is global snowpack: is global warming to blame?warming to blame?

Philip MoteClimate Impacts Group

University of Washington

Page 2: The West’s declining snowpack: is global warming to blame? Philip Mote Climate Impacts Group University of Washington.
Page 3: The West’s declining snowpack: is global warming to blame? Philip Mote Climate Impacts Group University of Washington.

20th century decline in NH snow cover

R.D. Brown, J. Climate, 2000

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Trends in snowpack

Use VIC and met data to evaluate trends, roles of temperature and precipitation

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Snow course data

Collected primarily ~April 1 beginning in 1915 (most in 1940s), added other months

Purpose: streamflow forecastingAdministered by USDA Natural

Resource Conservation ServiceMostly discontinued, some replaced by

SNOTEL

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Snow course ???

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Courtesy USDA NRCS

Data:NRCSCA DWRBC SRM

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Courtesy USDA NRCS

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decrease increase

Trends in April 1 SWE, 1950-2000

824 snow courses

73% – trends Large – trends PNWSome + trends SW

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decrease increaseTrends in April 1 SWE, 1950-2000Relative to 1950 value

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Former snow course location

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Relating SWE to climate data

• US Historical Climate Network (USHCN)

• Use nearest 5 stations to form reference time series T(t) and P(t)

• Regression: SWE(t)=aTT(t) + aPP(t)+(t)

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At almost every USHCN station, winters warmed

+ signs: warming but not statistically significant

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Winters wetter in much of the WestDrier in some of Northwest (PDO)

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Correlations between Nov-Mar climate and Apr 1 SWE

X-direction: precipY-direction: temp

Coldest locations insensitive to temperatureCascades very sensitive

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April 1 SWE trends, 1930-2002aP<P> aT<T>

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April 1 SWE trends, 1950-2002aP<P> aT<T>

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SNOTEL data: cold-season melt events vs Apr 1 SWE

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Relative trends 1950-1997

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Declining snowpack in the Cascades

From a simulation with a hydrology model

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1950-1997 relative trends vs DJF temperature

ObsVIC

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Trends in April 1 SWE in VIC simulation with fixed precipitation

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As the West warms,winter flows rise and summer flows drop

Figure by Iris Stewart, Scripps Inst. of Oceanog. (UC San Diego)

Page 34: The West’s declining snowpack: is global warming to blame? Philip Mote Climate Impacts Group University of Washington.

Simulation of future snowpack with VIC hydrologic model

Trend in total April 1 snowpack, 1950-97: -11%

Courtesy Andrew W. Wood, University of Washington

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Figure 1

Elevation (m) DJF Temp (C) NDJFM PCP (mm)

PNW

CA CRB

GB

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SNOTEL data: cold-season melt events vs Apr 1 SWE

Figure by Martyn Clark, Univ. of Colorado

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Regional average April 1 SWE

Obs oVIC x

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Changes in SWE vs changes in precip

1930s to 1990s 1945-55 to 1990s

Obs SWE

VIC SWE

Precip Obs SWE

VIC SWE

Precip

Cascades

-14% +1% +4% -29% -16% -5%

Rockies +11% +2% +9% -16% -9% +1%

California

+3% -14% +10% -2% -25% -1%

Interior +9% -6% +10% -22% -18% +2%

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Trends/15yr in snow days in Switzerland

From Scherrer et al., GRL 2004

Page 40: The West’s declining snowpack: is global warming to blame? Philip Mote Climate Impacts Group University of Washington.

Trends in Swiss snow days attributed to temperature and precipitation

precip and temp attributions; contour lines indicate the sum.

Attribution of trends shown by pseudo vectors; altitude and latitude

From Scherrer et al., GRL 2004

days/42 yrs.

days

/42 y

rs.

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Conclusions

• Observations show substantial declines in western snowpack; corroboration with VIC suggests they are real and largely temperature-driven

• Cascades, N. Calif most temp-sensitive

• Large increases in precipitation have offset warming in some places

• Is global warming causing the decline? Too soon to tell.