Publication | Open Access
Trends in Snowfall versus Rainfall in the Western United States
944
Citations
24
References
2006
Year
Future Climatic ChangeEngineeringExtreme WeatherWeather ForecastingClimate ModelingEarth SciencePrecipitationRegional Climate ResponseApplied MeteorologyDrought ForecastingHydroclimate ModelingClimate ChangeHydrometeorologyMeteorologyGeographyCryosphereWidespread WarmingClimate DynamicsClimatic ImpactClimatologyWestern United StatesWater ResourcesDrought
Western U.S. water resources depend on snowpack, and recent decades have seen earlier runoff due to more rain and earlier snowmelt. This study documents a regional trend toward decreasing winter snowfall water equivalent to precipitation ratios (SFE/P) from 1949–2004.
Abstract The water resources of the western United States depend heavily on snowpack to store part of the wintertime precipitation into the drier summer months. A well-documented shift toward earlier runoff in recent decades has been attributed to 1) more precipitation falling as rain instead of snow and 2) earlier snowmelt. The present study addresses the former, documenting a regional trend toward smaller ratios of winter-total snowfall water equivalent (SFE) to winter-total precipitation (P) during the period 1949–2004. The trends toward reduced SFE are a response to warming across the region, with the most significant reductions occurring where winter wet-day minimum temperatures, averaged over the study period, were warmer than −5°C. Most SFE reductions were associated with winter wet-day temperature increases between 0° and +3°C over the study period. Warmings larger than this occurred mainly at sites where the mean temperatures were cool enough that the precipitation form was less susceptible to warming trends. The trends toward reduced SFE/P ratios were most pronounced in March regionwide and in January near the West Coast, corresponding to widespread warming in these months. While mean temperatures in March were sufficiently high to allow the warming trend to produce SFE/P declines across the study region, mean January temperatures were cooler, with the result that January SFE/P impacts were restricted to the lower elevations near the West Coast. Extending the analysis back to 1920 shows that although the trends presented here may be partially attributable to interdecadal climate variability associated with the Pacific decadal oscillation, they also appear to result from still longer-term climate shifts.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1