Projections of Potential Flood Regime Changes in California

 

Guardado en:
Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores: Dettinger, Michael D., Hidalgo León, Hugo G., Das, Tapash, Cayan, Daniel R., Knowles, Noah
Formato: informe científico
Fecha de Publicación:2009
Descripción:Floods have been a recurring theme in California’s climatology, hydrology, and politics throughout its history. Today, California's aging water supply and flood protection infrastructures are challenged by major floods and increased standards for urban flood protection. With warming in the twenty-first century, some changes in California’s flood regimes seem likely: Higher snowlines may well increase the frequency of flooding; occasional larger than historical flood magnitudes are likely to follow—especially from the higher southern parts of the Sierra Nevada; potentials for floods may be exacerbated by wetter winter soils in high-altitude catchments; and opportunities for estuarine and coastal flooding may increase as sea-level rise and flood frequencies converge. Other changes are more difficult to project, and simulation models are used here to weigh competing influences that might either increase or diminish future floods. Both the Variable Infiltration Capacity (VIC) and Bay-Delta Watershed Model (BDWM) hydrologic models responded to downscaled climate-change projections with increases in flood frequencies and magnitudes, but neither yielded large changes in that regard, especially in the northern parts of the state. Future characteristics of major storms, in particular pineapple express or atmospheric river storms, by global climate models indicated changes mostly at the extremes: Years with many atmospheric river storms become more frequent in most climate models analyzed here, but the average number of such storms per year did not change much. Likewise, although the average intensity of storms was not projected to increase much in most climate models, occasional much-larger-than-historical-range storm intensities were simulated
País:Kérwá
Institución:Universidad de Costa Rica
Repositorio:Kérwá
OAI Identifier:oai:kerwa.ucr.ac.cr:10669/29857
Acceso en línea:http://www.energy.ca.gov/2009publications/CEC-500-2009-050/CEC-500-2009-050-D.PDF
https://hdl.handle.net/10669/29857
Palabra clave:California
Floods
Climate Change
Hydrologic change
Simulations
Atmospheric rivers
Sea-level rise