Litcius/Paper detail

Technical note: Precipitation-phase partitioning at landscape scales to regional scales

Elissa Lynn, Aaron Cuthbertson, Minxue He, Jordi P. Vasquez, Michael Anderson, Peter Coombe, John T. Abatzoglou, Benjamin J. Hatchett

2020Hydrology and earth system sciences47 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract. Water management throughout the western United States largely relies on the partitioning of cool season mountain precipitation into rain and snow, particularly snow as it maximizes available water for warm season use. Recent studies indicate a shift toward increased precipitation falling as rain, which is consistent with a warming climate. An approach is presented to estimate precipitation-phase partitioning across landscapes from 1948 to the present by combining fine-scale gridded precipitation data with coarse-scale freezing level and precipitation data from an atmospheric reanalysis. A marriage of these data sets allows for a new approach to estimate spatial patterns and trends in precipitation partitioning over elevational and latitudinal gradients in major water supply basins. This product is used in California as a diagnostic indicator of changing precipitation phase across mountain watersheds. Results show the largest increases in precipitation falling as rain during the past 70 years in lower elevation watersheds located within the climatological rain–snow transition regions of northern California during spring. Further development of the indicator can inform adaptive water management strategy development and implementation in the face of a changing climate.

Topics & Concepts

PrecipitationEnvironmental scienceSnowClimatologyClimate changeSpring (device)Rain and snow mixedPhysical geographyAtmospheric sciencesMeteorologyGeographyGeologyMechanical engineeringOceanographyEngineeringClimate variability and modelsHydrology and Watershed Management StudiesCryospheric studies and observations