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Seasonal snow cover decreases young water fractions in high Alpine catchments
Author(s) -
Ceperley Natalie,
Zuecco Giulia,
Beria Harsh,
Carturan Luca,
Michelon Anthony,
Penna Daniele,
Larsen Joshua,
Schaefli Bettina
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
hydrological processes
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.222
H-Index - 161
eISSN - 1099-1085
pISSN - 0885-6087
DOI - 10.1002/hyp.13937
Subject(s) - snowmelt , snow , environmental science , precipitation , context (archaeology) , glacier , streamflow , hydrology (agriculture) , surface runoff , water year , elevation (ballistics) , water resources , atmospheric sciences , drainage basin , physical geography , geology , meteorology , mathematics , ecology , geography , paleontology , geometry , cartography , geotechnical engineering , biology
Estimation of young water fractions ( F yw ), defined as the fraction of water in a stream younger than approximately 2–3 months, provides key information for water resource management in catchments where runoff is dominated by snowmelt. Knowing the average dependence of summer flow on winter precipitation is an essential context for comparing regional drought severity and provides the hydrological template for downstream water users and ecosystems. However, F yw estimation based on seasonal signals of stable isotopes of oxygen and hydrogen has not yet explicitly addressed how to parsimoniously include the seasonal shift of water input from snow. Using experimental data from three high‐elevation, Alpine catchments (one dominated by glacier and two by snow), we propose a framework to explicitly include the delays induced by snow storage into estimates of F yw . Scrutinizing the key methodological choices when estimating F yw from isotope data, we find that the methods used to construct precipitation input signals from sparse isotope samples can significantly impact F yw . Given this sensitivity, our revised procedure estimates a distribution of F yw values that incorporates a wide range of possible methodological choices and their uncertainties; it furthermore compares the commonly used amplitude ratio approach to a direct convolution approach, which circumvents the assumption that the isotopic signals have a sine curve shape, an assumption that is generally violated in snow‐dominated environments. Our new estimates confirm that high‐elevation Alpine catchments have low F yw values, spanning from 8 to 11%. Such low values have previously been interpreted as the impact of seasonal snow storage alone, but our comparison of different F yw estimation methods suggests that these low F yw values result from a combination of both snow cover effects and longer storage in the subsurface. In contrast, in the highest elevation, glacier dominated catchment, F yw is 3–4 times greater compared to the other two catchments, due to the lower storage and faster drainage processes. A future challenge, capturing spatio‐temporal snowmelt isotope signals during winter baseflow and the snowmelt period, remains to improve constraints on the F yw estimation technique.