Water Stewardship Information Sources

Citation Moore, RD, Allen, DM and Stahl, K. 2007. Climate Change and Low Flows: Influences of Groundwater and Glaciers. Prepared for Climate Change Action Fund, Natural Resources Canada. A875, 211 pp.
Organization UBC
URL https://www.sfu.ca/personal/dallen/CCAF_A875-FinalReport.pdf
Abstract/Description or Keywords Streamflow patterns in BC can be broadly classified as rain-dominated, hybrid (rain and snow),
snow-dominated, and glacierized, each having distinct low flow seasons. In this study, we chose
to focus on the summer/early autumn low flow period, as that has particular economic and
ecological significance.
Variability in stream discharge was measured over a low flow season in Bertrand Creek, Pepin
Brook and Fishtrap Creek, which drain the Abbotsford-Sumas aquifer in southwest British
Columbia and northwest Washington State. Discharge was measured across a series of profiles,
both repeating across a central line (at-a-station measurements) and along consecutive sections
from upstream to downstream (successive downstream measurements) to assess the repeatability
of the low flow measurements. As the flow in these small streams decreases, the coefficient of
variation of the mean discharge tends to increase when the flow is very low (i.e., <0.1 m3
/s),
although the trends for Fishtrap are weak and less reliable likely due to the higher flows at that
site. Overall, variations in measurements are of sufficient magnitude that subtle changes in
streamflow due to, for example, climate change may be difficult to detect.
Unglacierized catchments generally exhibited declining trends in September streamflow through
most of British Columbia, but not in August. Glacierized catchments, on the other hand, show the
opposite pattern, with dominantly negative trends in August but not September. The decreases in
September flows are broadly consistent with a decline in September precipitation over the period
studied. For all four regimes, the most important control on August streamflow is August
precipitation. August streamflow is also positively but more weakly related to lagged variables
including July precipitation and the previous winter's precipitation.
There is clear evidence for the effect of multi-year storage change only for the glacierized
catchments. Glacier retreat over the last few decades has apparently reduced glacier area
sufficiently so as to reduce meltwater generation and thus streamflow. Snowmelt-dominated
catchments showed no tendency to trends or serial correlation in the model residuals, though the
runs test suggested a substantial number of stations had non-random residuals. Both raindominated
and hybrid catchments tended to have positive residuals in August, suggesting either
an increasing trend in groundwater storage or a spurious cause such as model mis-specification. The majority of groundwater well observation records in BC start in the late 1970s or 1980s,
providing a total of 20 to 30 years of record. A select few of these wells monitor aquifers in
pristine areas that reflect natural variability; the others have been influenced by human activity
making them less representative. Climate change detection requires long term records because
natural climate variability phenomena, such as the Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO), last over
multiple decades. Long term fluctuations of precipitation, air temperature, and stream flow can be
reflected in groundwater level fluctuations, but the hydrogeology of a given aquifer plays a
unique role in the interaction of climate, surface water, and groundwater. By comparing the
relationships between groundwater, climate, and surface water within and between groups of well
records from the two major hydro-climatic zones in BC, a system for detecting the influence of
climate change and variability on groundwater in the absence of long term records is defined, and
suitable correlation coefficients are applied to evaluate the strength of these interactions.
Different aquifer types are assessed with respect to vulnerability to climate change influences.
Overall, summer groundwater levels appear to have lowered across the province, despite an
increase in winter precipitation and recharge during the same time period. Due to the limited
availability of long well records near gauged streams, the attribution of whether and how these
changes have affected low flows proved difficult. The available groundwater observation wells
vary substantially in terms of aquifer properties and the hydraulic connection to rivers and for
many, we suspect the natural records may be altered by changes in the abstraction patterns. The
few examples where streamflow and groundwater observations are available in the same basin
and are nearby furthermore provide some of the exceptions to the trends found. In Abbotsford,
even though a field study and a modelling study showed that summer low flow is fed by
groundwater, low flows increased while over the same time period groundwater levels decreased.
The same was found for Grand Forks, where previous studies have shown that streamflow is fed
by groundwater in the summer. However, the recharge mechanisms are different in both
examples.
A methodology was developed to simulate the transient effects of glacier retreat on streamflow
patterns by coupling a semi-distributed hydrological model (HBV-EC) with a glacier mass
balance and glacier scaling model. This study investigated the sensitivity of streamflow to
changes in glacier cover for the Bridge River basin in British Columbia, which is an important
water source for one of BC Hydro's hydro-electric facilities. The model is driven into the future
assuming three different types of climate scenarios: a continuation of the current climate and a
moderate warming scenario realized with a weather generator, as well as a set of downscaled iii
GCM scenarios with greenhouse gas forcing. Considering specifically the effect of changing
glacier area in the basin, the modelled glacier mass balance is used to re-scale the glacier every
decade using a universal volume-area-scaling relation. The model application shows strong
reductions in glacier area and summer streamflow even under the assumption of a continuation of
the present climate. The results of this study suggest that climate warming and associated glacier
retreat will have significant implications for water resources and aquatic ecology. Glacier-fed
rivers are likely to experience a shift from a glacial regime with high flows in mid and late
summer, with an associated moderating effect on stream temperature, to a regime that responds to
the summer dry period with streamflow recession, low flows and increased temperatures.
Information Type report
Regional Watershed Province
Sub-watershed if known
Aquifer #
Comments
Project status complete
Contact Name Dan Moore
Contact Email [email protected]