Attribution of runoff change in the alpine basin: a case study of the Heihe Upstream Basin,China |
| |
Authors: | Zhentao Cong Muhammad Shahid Huimin Lei Dawen Yang |
| |
Affiliation: | State Key Laboratory of Hydroscience and Engineering, Department of Hydraulic Engineering, Tsinghua University, Beijing, China |
| |
Abstract: | ![]() Quantifying the relative contributions of different factors to runoff change is helpful for basin management, especially in the context of climate change and anthropogenic activities. The effect of snow change on runoff is seldom evaluated. We attribute the runoff change in the Heihe Upstream Basin (HUB), an alpine basin in China, using two approaches: a snowmelt-based water balance model and the Budyko framework. Results from these approaches show good consistency. Precipitation accounts for 58% of the increasing runoff. The contribution of land-cover change seems unremarkable for the HUB as a whole, where land-cover change has a major effect on runoff in each sub-basin, but its positive effect on increasing runoff in sub-basins 1 and 3 is offset by the negative effect in sub-basin 2. Snow change plays an essential role in each sub-basin, with a contribution rate of around 30%. The impact of potential evapotranspiration is almost negligible.EDITOR D. KoutsoyiannisASSOCIATE EDITOR S. Huang |
| |
Keywords: | runoff change attribution climate change Budyko framework snowmelt-based water balance model Heihe Upstream Basin |
|
|