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Ancient trees, climate models, and the future of drought in western Colorado

2013. Ancient trees, climate models, and the future of drought in western Colorado. 38 th Annual Colorado Water Workshop Western State Colorado University, Gunnison, CO July 17, 2013. Jeff Lukas - Lukas@colorado.edu Western Water Assessment CIRES, University of Colorado.

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Ancient trees, climate models, and the future of drought in western Colorado

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  1. 2013 Ancient trees, climate models, and the future of drought in western Colorado 38th Annual Colorado Water Workshop Western State Colorado University, Gunnison, CO July 17, 2013 Jeff Lukas- Lukas@colorado.edu Western Water Assessment CIRES, University of Colorado

  2. Parsing our changing climate: a conceptual model + PRESENT FUTURE PAST PRESENT External climate forcing (Greenhouse gases, etc.) Internal (“natural, unforced”) climate variability change = PRESENT FUTURE Changing future climate

  3. Drought: driven by precipitation deficit, exacerbated by high temperatures Middle photo: Jane Stulp

  4. Need to look back and forwards to assess future drought risk Instrumental record Climate model projections Tree-ring record 1900 2013

  5. 20 24 18 22 16 20 14 18 12 16 Streamflow, MAF Precipitation, in. 10 14 8 12 6 10 4 Precipitation 8 2 Streamflow 6 0 1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 Precipitation deficits and hydrological drought Western Colorado annual (water year) precipitation vs. Western Colorado naturalized runoff, 1900-2012 Precip Data: NOAA NCDC, CO Division 2 data Streamflow data: Reclamation (1906-2010); 2011-12 values estimated from preliminary Reclamation data

  6. Western Colorado’s annual water balance – average year (MAF = million acre-feet) Precip: 40 MAF ET : -30 MAF Runoff: 10 MAF Image: D. Meko, U. of Arizona

  7. Western Colorado’s annual water balance – drought year (MAF = million acre-feet) Precip: 30 MAF ET : -24 MAF Runoff: 6 MAF While precipitation declines only 25% vs. average year, runoff declines 40% due to ET component increasing as proportion of precipitation Image: D. Meko, U. of Arizona

  8. 1977 1983 Using tree rings to reconstruct past droughts Tree growth is typically limited by moisture availability So: – a dry year leads to a narrow growth ring – a wet year leads to a wide growth ring Douglas-fir, south San Juans, CO

  9. Ancient trees and wood are abundant across western Colorado

  10. 30 25 20 Annual Flow, MAF 15 10 5 0 750 1000 1250 1500 1750 2000 Tree-ring reconstructed annual flows, Colorado River at Lees Ferry, 762-2005 2002 1977, 2002: in the lowest 10 reconstructed annual flows since 762 Meko et al. 2007. Medieval Drought in the Upper Colorado River Basin, Geophysical Research Letters; data available at http://treeflow.info

  11. 18 17 16 15 14 Annual Flow, MAF 13 12 11 10 750 1000 1250 1500 1750 2000 Water Year Tree-ring reconstructed annual flows, Colorado River at Lees Ferry, 762-2005, with 20-year running mean Instrumental record

  12. 18 17 16 15 14 Annual Flow, MAF 13 12 11 10 750 1000 1250 1500 1750 2000 Water Year Tree-ring reconstructed annual flows, Colorado River at Lees Ferry, 762-2005, with 20-year running mean Mid-1100s megadrought 46 of 57 years were dry

  13. Future projections from global climate models Jan. 2070

  14. Temperatures – Going up! Western Colorado annual temperatures - ensemble of 16 GCMs, medium emissions scenario 60°F +4ºF by 2050 50°F Observed temp. 1950 2000 2050 2100 Source: Marty Hoerling, NOAA ESRL PSD; data available from http://gdo-dcp.ucllnl.org/

  15. Precipitation – Up? Down? Western Colorado annual precipitation – ensemble of 16 GCMs, medium emissions 32” 16” Observed precip. 2000 2100 1950 2050 Source: Marty Hoerling, NOAA ESRL PSD

  16. 50 40 30 Annual Runoff, MAF 20 10 0 1950 2000 2050 2100 Runoff – Probably down, but continued high variability! Upper Colorado River Basin annual runoff – ensemble of 16 GCMs, medium emissions Observed runoff Data: http://gis.usbr.gov/Streamflow_Projections/

  17. Western Colorado’s annual water balance – average year, median 2050 projection (+4oF, no precip change) Precip: 40 MAF ET : -31 MAF Runoff: 9 MAF + - Even though precipitation doesn’t change, runoff declines ~10% to 9 MAF due to increasing ET Image: D. Meko, U. of Arizona

  18. Projections for Western Colorado from all GCM runs used in the most recent studies More runoff Less runoff Median 2050 Source: Denver Water & Joint Front Range Climate Change Vulnerability Study, as printed in Kerr, Science, 25 Nov 2011

  19. The “new normal” in a (yet) warmer climate • Increased evaporation and transpiration • More rain and less snow in fall and spring • Reduced spring snowpack • Earlier peak runoff • Reduced annual flows (unless precip gains cancel out) • Reduced summer soil moisture • Greater plant moisture stress and crop water use • These are all impacts currently associated with drought…they will occur more often in a warming climate • Any future drought will be more severe, and will tend to persist longer, for a given precipitation deficit

  20. Don’t fixate on trend: impacts will still be most deeply felt in low-precipitation (drought) years Middle photo: Jane Stulp

  21. Dust-on-snow also makes snow melt sooner, and probably reduces overall runoff • Already has significant hydrologic impact; likely to get worse in future with warming/drying of source regions • Impacts are in same direction as those caused by warming Photos by Chris Landry, CSAS

  22. 1950 2000 2050 2100 Future drought: expectations from tree rings, instrumental record, and climate model projections 1900 750 1000 1250 1500 1750 2000 2000

  23. Take-home • Ancient trees tell us that the natural hydroclimatic variability is larger than the last 100 years would suggest (extreme short-term droughts & megadroughts) • The instrumental record tells us precipitation drives drought, but temperature (ET) is also a big factor • The climate models tell us that the temperature (ET) dial will continue to get turned up, but much more uncertain about precipitation • Drought conditions will likely be more frequent and severe in the future • Given the uncertainties in future climate, “scenario-based” planning is more appropriate than traditional “single-target” planning

  24. Please contact me (lukas@colorado.edu) with questions or requests for information

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