Using Large Climate Ensembles to Plan for the Hydrological Impact of Climate Change in the Freshwater Environment

被引:0
作者
Fai Fung
Glenn Watts
Ana Lopez
Harriet G. Orr
Mark New
Chris Extence
机构
[1] School of Geography and the Environment,Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research
[2] University of Oxford,Environment Agency of England and Wales
[3] Horizon House,Grantham Research Institute
[4] London School of Economics and Political Sciences,Department of Environmental and Geographic Science
[5] University of Cape Town,African Climate and Development Initiative
[6] University of Cape Town,undefined
来源
Water Resources Management | 2013年 / 27卷
关键词
Climate change; Uncertainty; River ecosystems; Macro-invertebrate response; Water resources; Decision making; Modelling; Large ensembles;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
We explore the use of large ensembles of climate scenarios to inform climate change adaptation in response to hydrological impacts on the freshwater environment, using a sensitive chalk river in south east England to illustrate the approach. The climateprediction.net experiment provides large ensembles of transient climate series from 1920 to 2080. We use 246 transient climate series in the CATCHMOD rainfall-run-off model to develop large ensembles of plausible river flows for the River Itchen. This transient ensemble allows the exploration of how flows may change through the twenty-first century, and demonstrates the range of possible consequences for freshwater ecosystems, based on invertebrate community impacts. Hydrological modelling of flow sequences including abstraction allows the continued effectiveness of river support from groundwater to be assessed. A new environmental impact matrix considers the response of the freshwater ecosystem in the Itchen, concentrating particularly on macro-invertebrates. Through the century increasing numbers of models fail the flow targets, with a minority of models suggesting flows that would lead to irreversible change to the invertebrate community. The large ensemble provides a richer picture of the range of possible change, allowing managers to explore a range of different responses. The approach used is illustrative, but demonstrates that large ensembles may be of great value in improving the understanding of the possible impact of climate change, provided that they can be communicated effectively to decision-makers.
引用
收藏
页码:1063 / 1084
页数:21
相关论文
共 176 条
[1]  
Acreman M(2008)Developing environmental standards for abstractions from UK rivers to implement the EU Water Framework Directive Hydrological Sciences Journal/Journal des Sciences Hydrologiques 53 1105-1120
[2]  
Dunbar M(2010)Environmental flows and the European water framework directive Freshw Biol 55 32-48
[3]  
Hannaford J(2007)Towards integrated environmental models of everywhere: Uncertainty, data and modelling as a learning process Hydrology and Earth System Sciences 11 460-467
[4]  
Mountford O(2009)Conditioning rainfall-runoff model parameters for ungauged catchments and land management impacts analysis Hydrology and Earth System Sciences 13 893-904
[5]  
Wood P(2006)The thermal regime of rivers Freshw Biol 51 1389-1406
[6]  
Holmes N(2009)River discharge and local-scale physical habitat influence macroinvertebrate LIFE scores Freshw Biol 55 226-242
[7]  
Cowx I(2010)Interaction between macroinvertebrates, discharge and physical habitat in upland rivers Aquat Conserv Mar Freshwat Ecosyst 20 S31-S44
[8]  
Noble R(1999)River flow indexing using British benthic macroinvertebrates: A framework for setting hydroecological objectives Regulated Rivers: Research & Management 15 545-574
[9]  
Extence C(1988)River regulation by seasonal groundwater abstraction: The case of the River Itchen Regulated Rivers Research & Management 2 335-347
[10]  
Aldrick J(2003)Use of statistically and dynamically downscaled atmospheric model output for hydrologic simulations in three mountainous basins in the western United States J Hydrol 282 56-75