Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

SNRI update on climate-change aspects of IRWM plan

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "SNRI update on climate-change aspects of IRWM plan"— Presentation transcript:

1 SNRI update on climate-change aspects of IRWM plan
Roger Bales, Mohammad Safeeq & collaborators Topics in this talk Sierra Nevada climate Water balance Climate impacts Linking headwaters to groundwater Photo: Margot Wholey Dec 14, 2015

2 Extremes are part of California’s climate
Variability & drought Extremes are part of California’s climate Mar 27, 2010 Mar 29, 2015 Apr 3, 2017

3 Multi-year dry periods are part of our Mediterranean climate
1100 yr drought record Reconstructed flows of San Joaquin R. Color shading marks below-median periods 4+ yr long 1-6 per century Multi-year dry periods are part of our Mediterranean climate Meko et al DWR report

4 Snow-line changes reflect temperature increases in the Sierra Nevada
Rising snow line Snow-line changes reflect temperature increases in the Sierra Nevada Extremes in the past yr are not a sufficient guide to the future Mar 31, 2011 Apr 3, 2017

5 Kings-Kaweah-Kern snowcover
Mar 31, 2011 Apr 1, 2017

6 Kings-Kaweah-Kern snowcover
Mar 31, 2011 Apr 1, 2017

7 Giant Sequoia & drought
Over 70 groves in southern Sierra Nevada Survived the drought Some quite vulnerable to a longer, hot drought Su et al., 2017 G. Rom, Flickr

8 Topics in this talk Sierra Nevada climate Water balance Climate impacts Linking headwaters to groundwater

9 California water balance
Million AF Precip: 200 Applied: 80 Water supplies AF = 1233 Bm3 Agriculture: 80% (33 MAF) Urban 20% (8 MAF) Data from DWR, adapted from Nor. Cal. Water Assn.

10 Basic water balance Precipitation = Evapotranspiration + Runoff + ΔStorage = + snow & rain Evapotranspiration refers to evaporation, sublimation plus water use by vegetation

11 We can measure & manage evapotranspiration on a basin-wide basis
Sierra Nevada Precipitation = Runoff + Evapotranspiration Map from CA Water Plan, 2013

12 Kings R. basin, annual water balance
1:1 line Streamflow is linearly related to precipitation, as evapotranspiration changes little from year to year

13 Multi-year whole-basin water balance
Note that the 2016 value includes the effect of the 614 km2 Rough Fire. P = ET + Q - ΔS Bales et al., in review

14 Multi-year whole-basin water balance
Note differences in the (pre-drought) and drought). P = ET + Q - ΔS Bales et al., in review

15 Linking headwaters to groundwater
Topics in this talk Sierra Nevada climate Water balance Climate impacts Linking headwaters to groundwater Lake Success CADWR photo

16 Shifts in California’s temperatures & why it matters
Higher evapotranspiration Higher environmental flow Increase in the size of wildfires More heat waves, a longer frost-free season & fewer cold snaps A lack of snow accumulation during near-normal winter precipitation (a.k.a. warm snow drought) A shift in precipitation phase

17 Warmer temperature = more evapotranspiration (ET)
Goulden & Bales, 2014

18 Kings R. average flow Sorabi et al., in preparation

19 Topics in this talk Sierra Nevada climate Water balance Climate impacts Linking headwaters to groundwater

20 Reconnecting a fragmented system
Water in the balance – UC TV Sustainable California

21 Managing evapotranspiration
Even thin Variable thin 1 km Control Managing evapotranspiration Stanislaus-Tuolumne Experimental Forest Basal-area decrease = 40-50% Control 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 950 570 340 0.4 Even thin Variable thin NDVI mm/yr ET, mm yr-1 Control Even thin Variable thin 1985 1995 2005 2015 2.0 1.0 1000 mm Mean WY precipitation 1985 1995 2005 2015 Year J. Roche et al., submitted

22 1-day peaks increased by more than 3 fold
Effect of temperature changes on groundwater-banking potential 90th percentile Flood flows Kocis and Dahlke, 2017 1-day peaks increased by more than 3 fold Sorabi et al., in preparation

23 Whole-basin integration is key for Central Valley
Managed Recharge Opportunistic Recharge Reservoir reoperation Groundwater is our dry-period reserve; & sustainable use requires both more recharge & less extraction

24 Climate-change & headwaters: climate-modeling projections
Historical variability in snowfall closely resembles the projected 2040-warming scenario (+1.8oC) By 2080s (+3.0oC), mountain snowfall will be reduced to 17 MAF, 30% lower than the average snowfall in 10 warmest years Snowpack storage in the Kings River Basin will decline by 50% under +4oC warming Water yield in the Kings River Basin will increase under warmer climate Flow will shift early in the year, i.e. more winter runoff

25 Management challenge Water security is a major challenge facing California Integrated water systems designed to manage green infrastructure & groundwater recharge is key to future water security

26 Comments? NSF Southern Sierra Critical Zone Observatory
Spread them out throughout the basin but can be constrained. NSF Southern Sierra Critical Zone Observatory


Download ppt "SNRI update on climate-change aspects of IRWM plan"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google