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Warming Alters Hydrologic Heterogeneity: Simulated Climate Sensitivity of Hydrology‐Based Microrefugia in the Snow‐to‐Rain Transition Zone

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Adrienne Marshall, Timothy Link, John Abatzoglou, Gerald N Flerchinger, Daniel G Marks, and L. Tedrow, 2019-02-12, Warming Alters Hydrologic Heterogeneity: Simulated Climate Sensitivity of Hydrology‐Based Microrefugia in the Snow‐to‐Rain Transition Zone: Advancing Earth and Space Science, v. 55, iss. 3, p. 2122- 2141.

Summary

Abstract (from AGU100): In complex terrain, drifting snow contributes to ecohydrologic landscape heterogeneity and ecological refugia. In this study, we assessed the climate sensitivity of hydrological dynamics in a semiarid mountainous catchment in the snow‐to‐rain transition zone. This catchment includes a distinct snow drift‐subsidized refugium that comprises a small portion (14.5%) of the watershed but accounts for a disproportionate amount (modeled average 56%) of hydrological flux generation. We conducted climate sensitivity experiments using a physically based hydrologic model to assess responses of a suite of hydrologic metrics across the watershed. Experiments with an imposed 3.5 °C warming showed reductions in average maximum [...]

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  • National and Regional Climate Adaptation Science Centers
  • Northwest CASC

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Wildlife and Plants
Drought, Fire and Extreme Weather
Landscapes
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citationTypeJournal Article
journalAdvancing Earth and Space Science
parts
typeDOI
value10.1029/2018WR023063
typeVolume
value55
typeIssue
value3
typePages
value2122- 2141

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