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Published byMiranda Simpson Modified over 9 years ago
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Fine-Resolution, Regional-Scale Terrestrial Hydrologic Fluxes Simulated with the Integrated Landscape Hydrology Model (ILHM) David W Hyndman Anthony D Kendall
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Unprecedented Changes Pijanowski (Purdue) Land Use Change IPCC AR4 Climate Change Land Use Intensification USCB and USDA
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Integrated Landscape Hydrology Model (ILHM) –Integrates 4 domains of hydrologic modeling –Intended for large-scale, fine-resolution simulations –Modular code, readily expandable –Readily incorporates GIS, remote sensing inputs
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Muskegon River Watershed, MI –~7400 km 2 –Climate & ecological gradients Lake effect precipitation Deciduous/Mixed transition –Major historical land use change Forest Agriculture Agriculture Forest and Urban
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Expanded Model Domain –~19,000 km 2 100 to 400m grid cells –28-year simulation 1980 – 2007 Hourly timesteps
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Select Input Data Types –GIS Inputs Land use Soil texture Subsurface geologic maps Elevation map –Gage climate data Precipitation Solar radiation Windspeed Relative humidity Air/soil temperatures –Distributed remotely sensed inputs NEXRAD precipitation Satellite Leaf Area Index (LAI)
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Uncalibrated Streamflow Predictions –Baseflows well simulated, regardless of scale – some regional bias –Total discharge error less than 6% of annual precipitation 43 sq. km 629 sq. km 3711 sq. km
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ET and Recharge Averages (1980 – 2007) –Highly spatially variable Soils, land use, climate variability –Recharge strongly sensitive to lake-effect precipitation
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Monthly Watershed-Average Fluxes –2 annual recharge pulses: snowmelt/spring & early fall –ET dominates during the growing season –Storage in snowpack and soil are important to dynamics
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Preliminary Climate Change Scenarios –Average of 24 GCM outputs A1B, A2, & B1 scenarios –Offset observed data using modeled anomalies
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Changes to Groundwater Recharge –Average 2090 - 2099 –More frequent snowmelt in all scenarios Smaller persistent snowpack Reduced spring recharge –Less fall recharge
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Climate Change Implications –Higher spring water tables –More frequent spring floods –More seasonal wetlands –Earlier decline of summer water table –Lower summer baseflows –Longer low-flow period
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Summary –Good predictions without site-specific calibration –Variability is the rule: Groundwater recharge typically treated as a static input in groundwater models Strong spatial and temporal variability at all scales Even 425 m resolution here not sufficient to fully describe land use and soils –Gradients in precipitation and temperature well below typical climate model resolutions Lake effect not well described by climate models
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