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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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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
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
Drought: driven by precipitation deficit, exacerbated by high temperatures Middle photo: Jane Stulp
Need to look back and forwards to assess future drought risk Instrumental record Climate model projections Tree-ring record 1900 2013
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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/
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
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/
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
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
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
Don’t fixate on trend: impacts will still be most deeply felt in low-precipitation (drought) years Middle photo: Jane Stulp
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
1950 2000 2050 2100 Future drought: expectations from tree rings, instrumental record, and climate model projections 1900 750 1000 1250 1500 1750 2000 2000
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
Please contact me (lukas@colorado.edu) with questions or requests for information