29 research outputs found
Characterizing contributions of glacier melt and groundwater during the dry season in a poorly gauged catchment of the Cordillera Blanca (Peru)
The retreat of glaciers in the tropics will have a significant impact on water resources. In order to overcome limitations with discontinuous to nonexistent hydrologic measurements in remote mountain watersheds, a hydrochemical and isotopic mass balance model is used to identify and characterize dry season water origins at the glacier fed Querococha basin located in southern Cordillera Blanca, Peru. Dry season water samples, collected intermittently between 1998 and 2007, were analyzed for major ions and the stable isotopes of water (ÎŽ^18 O and ÎŽ^2 H). The hydrochemical and isotopic data are analysed using conservative characteristics of selected tracers and relative contributions are calculated based on pre-identified contributing sources at mixing points sampled across the basin. The results show that during the dry-season, groundwater is the largest contributor to basin outflow and that the flux of groundwater is temporally variable. The groundwater contribution significantly correlates (P-value=0.004 to 0.044) to the antecedent precipitation regime at 3 and 18â36 months. Assuming this indicates a maximum of 4 years of precipitation accumulation in groundwater reserves, the Querococha watershed outflows are potentially vulnerable to multi-year droughts and climate related changes in the precipitation regime. The results show that the use of hydrochemical and isotopic data can contribute to hydrologic studies in remote, data poor regions, and that groundwater contribution to tropical proglacial hydrologic systems is a critical component of dry season discharge
Glacier loss and hydro-social risks in the Peruvian Andes
Accelerating glacier recession in tropical highlands and in the Peruvian Andes specifically is a manifestation of global climate change that is influencing the hydrologic cycle and impacting water resources across a range of socio-environmental systems. Despite predictions regarding the negative effects of long-term glacier decline on water availability, many uncertainties remain regarding the timing and variability of hydrologic changes and their impacts. To improve context-specific understandings of the effects of climate change and glacial melt on water resources in the tropical Andes, this article synthesizes results from long-term transdisciplinary research with new findings from two glacierized Peruvian watersheds to develop and apply a multi-level conceptual framework focused on the coupled biophysical and social determinants of water access and hydro-social risks in these contexts. The framework identifies several interacting variablesâhydrologic transformation, land cover change, perceptions of water availability, water use and infrastructure in local and regional economies, and water rights and governanceâto broadly assess how glacier change is embedded with social risks and vulnerability across diverse water uses and sectors. The primary focus is on the Santa River watershed draining the Cordillera Blanca to the Pacific. Additional analysis of hydrologic change and water access in the geographically distinct Shullcas River watershed draining the Huaytapallana massif towards the city of Huancayo further illuminates the heterogeneous character of hydrologic risk and vulnerability in the Andes
Multi-scale temporal variability in meltwater contributions in a tropical glacierized watershed
Climate models predict amplified warming at high elevations in low latitudes,
making tropical glacierized regions some of the most vulnerable hydrological
systems in the world. Observations reveal decreasing streamflow due to
retreating glaciers in the Andes, which hold 99 % of all tropical
glaciers. However, the timescales over which meltwater contributes to
streamflow and the pathways it takes â surface and subsurface â remain
uncertain, hindering our ability to predict how shrinking glaciers will
impact water resources. Two major contributors to this uncertainty are the
sparsity of hydrologic measurements in tropical glacierized watersheds and
the complication of hydrograph separation where there is year-round glacier
melt. We address these challenges using a multi-method approach that employs
repeat hydrochemical mixing model analysis, hydroclimatic time series
analysis, and integrated watershed modeling. Each of these approaches
interrogates distinct timescale relationships among meltwater, groundwater,
and stream discharge. Our results challenge the commonly held conceptual
model that glaciers buffer discharge variability. Instead, in a subhumid
watershed on VolcĂĄn Chimborazo, Ecuador, glacier melt drives nearly all
the variability in discharge (Pearson correlation coefficient of 0.89 in
simulations), with glaciers contributing a broad range of 20 %â60 %
or wider of discharge, mostly (86 %) through surface runoff on hourly
timescales, but also through infiltration that increases annual groundwater
contributions by nearly 20 %. We further found that rainfall may enhance
glacier melt contributions to discharge at timescales that complement glacier
melt production, possibly explaining why minimum discharge occurred at the
study site during warm but dry El Niño conditions, which typically
heighten melt in the Andes. Our findings caution against extrapolations from
isolated measurements: stream discharge and glacier melt contributions in
tropical glacierized systems can change substantially at hourly to
interannual timescales, due to climatic variability and surface to subsurface
flow processes.</p
Global-scale hydrological response to future glacier mass loss
Worldwide glacier retreat and associated future runoff changes raise major concerns over the sustainability of global water resources1,2,3,4, but global-scale assessments of glacier decline and the resulting hydrological consequences are scarce5,6. Here we compute global glacier runoff changes for 56 large-scale glacierized drainage basins to 2100 and analyse the glacial impact on streamflow. In roughly half of the investigated basins, the modelled annual glacier runoff continues to rise until a maximum (âpeak waterâ) is reached, beyond which runoff steadily declines. In the remaining basins, this tipping point has already been passed. Peak water occurs later in basins with larger glaciers and higher ice-cover fractions. Typically, future glacier runoff increases in early summer but decreases in late summer. Although most of the 56 basins have less than 2% ice coverage, by 2100 one-third of them might experience runoff decreases greater than 10% due to glacier mass loss in at least one month of the melt season, with the largest reductions in central Asia and the Andes. We conclude that, even in large-scale basins with minimal ice-cover fraction, the downstream hydrological effects of continued glacier wastage can be substantial, but the magnitudes vary greatly among basins and throughout the melt season
Glacier recession and water resources in Peru's Cordillera Blanca
The tropical glaciers of the Cordillera Blanca, Peru, are rapidly retreating, resulting in complex impacts on the hydrology of the upper Rio Santa watershed. The effect of this retreat on water resources is evaluated by analyzing historical and recent time series of daily discharge at nine measurement points. Using the Mann-Kendall nonparametric statistical test, the significance of trends in three hydrograph parameters was studied. Results are interpreted using synthetic time series generated from a hydrologic model that calculates hydrographs based on glacier retreat sequences. The results suggest that seven of the nine study watersheds have probably crossed a critical transition point, and now exhibit decreasing dry-season discharge. Our results suggest also that once the glaciers completely melt, annual discharge will be lower than present by 2-30% depending on the watershed. The retreat influence on discharge will be more pronounced during the dry season than at other periods of the year. At La Balsa, which measures discharge from the upper Rio Santa, the glacier retreat could lead to a decrease in dry-season average discharge of 30%