Water Stewardship Information Sources

ID 399
Citation Davis, R. 2012. Modelling the effects of forest diturbances on snow accumulation and ablation in the Okanagan. MSc Thesis, University of Lethbridge.
Organization FLNRO
URL https://www.uleth.ca/dspace/handle/10133/3300
Abstract/Description or Keywords Forest disturbances significantly affect snowmelt dominated watersheds.
Given that snowmelt from mountain regions provides up to 80% of the
annual stream
ow in the North American west, disturbances in these watersheds
will impact water availability for downstream users. This study
used eld data from stand-scale studies to represent forest disturbances in
a hydrological model in order to quantify the potential snow hydrology response
to varying spatial extent of disturbance. The sensitivity of snow accumulation
and ablation response increased with disturbance severity and
extent of disturbance. Results may provide water resource management
with a greater understanding of the potential impact on post-disturbance
snowmelt runoff.
Information Type thesis
Regional Watershed Okanagan
Sub-watershed if known Penticton Creek
Aquifer #
Comments
Project status complete
Contact Name Rita Winkler
Contact Email [email protected]