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Modeling Forest Snow Using Relative Canopy Structure Metrics

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C. David Moeser, Graham Sexstone, and Jake Kurzweil, 2024-05-14, Modeling Forest Snow Using Relative Canopy Structure Metrics: Water, v. 16, no. 10.

Summary

Snow and watershed models typically do not account for forest structure and shading; therefore, they display substantial uncertainty when attempting to account for forest change or when comparing hydrological response between forests with varying characteristics. This study collected snow water equivalent (SWE) measurements in a snow-dominated forest in Colorado, the United States, with variable canopy structure. The SWE measurements were integrated with 1 m Lidar derived canopy structure metrics and incoming solar radiation to create empirical SWE offset equations for four canopy structure groupings (forest gaps, south-facing forest edges, north-facing forest edges, and the interior forest) that varied in size compared to an open [...]

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  • National and Regional Climate Adaptation Science Centers
  • South Central CASC

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citationTypeJournal Article
journalWater
parts
typeDOI
value https://doi.org/10.3390/w16101398
typeVolume
value16
typeNumber
value10
typeArticle
value1398

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