February 14, 2019
Journal Article

Observed Spatiotemporal Changes in the Mechanisms of Extreme Water Available for Runoff in the Western United States

Abstract

We used a quality-controlled Snowpack Telemetry (SNOTEL) data set (1979–2017) combined with the nonparametric regional Kendall test (RKT) to examine changes in annual maximum water available for runoff at the land surface under four hydrometeorological conditions (snowmelt only, rain-on-snow, all melt with or without rainfall, and all melt plus rainfall on snow-free ground) over the mountainous regions of the western U.S. Our RKT analyses indicated significant declining trends at point (SNOTEL) scale under all four conditions. The annual maximum of all melt plus rainfall decreased primarily in the southwestern U.S., while the frequency of rain-on-snow events increased significantly in the northwestern U.S. The rate of annual maximum snowmelt only decreased in 10 of 11 ecological regions across the western U.S. These results suggest that under a warming climate, the four types of annual maximum water available for runoff have been substantially decreasing at local scale across the western U.S.

Revised: September 30, 2020 | Published: February 14, 2019

Citation

Yan H., N. Sun, M.S. Wigmosta, R. Skaggs, L. Leung, A. Coleman, and Z. Hou. 2019. Observed Spatiotemporal Changes in the Mechanisms of Extreme Water Available for Runoff in the Western United States. Geophysical Research Letters 46, no. 2:767-775. PNNL-SA-138215. doi:10.1029/2018GL080260