Water Stewardship Information Sources

ID 3
Citation Adams, RS, Spittlehouse, DL and Winkler, RD. 1996. The effect of a canopy on the snowmelt energy balance. Proceedings of the 64th Western Snow Conference, Bend Oregon.
Organization FLNRO
URL http://www.westernsnowconference.org/node/438
Abstract/Description or Keywords Energy balances over snow in a clearcut, an adjacent mature Engelmann spruce-subalpine fir forest, and a thinned and pruned juvenile lodgepole pine stand are presented. Net irradiance, soil heat flux density, and heat storage within the pack, were combined with eddy correlation measurements of sensible and latent heat flux density to estimate the energy available for snowmelt. When the ripe snow packs were melting, latent and soil heat flux density, and heat storage were negligible. A highly stable lower atmosphere resulted in low sensible heat flux densities. Although distinct differences in magnitude were observed between sites, net irradiance was the largest energy source for snowmelt at all three sites. Daily snowmelt calculated from energy balance measurements agreed well with measurements from snowmelt lysimeters. forest harvest, peak flow, snowmelt
Information Type article
Regional Watershed All
Sub-watershed if known Mayson Lake
Aquifer #
Comments
Project status complete
Contact Name Rita Winkler
Contact Email [email protected]