Environmental Research Letters (Jan 2024)

Hydrological regimes and evaporative flux partitioning at the climatic ends of high mountain Asia

  • S Fugger,
  • T E Shaw,
  • A Jouberton,
  • E S Miles,
  • P Buri,
  • M McCarthy,
  • C Fyffe,
  • S Fatichi,
  • M Kneib,
  • Peter Molnar,
  • F Pellicciotti

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/ad25a0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 4
p. 044057

Abstract

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High elevation headwater catchments are complex hydrological systems that seasonally buffer water and release it in the form of snow and ice melt, modulating downstream runoff regimes and water availability. In High Mountain Asia (HMA), where a wide range of climates from semi-arid to monsoonal exist, the importance of the cryospheric contributions to the water budget varies with the amount and seasonal distribution of precipitation. Losses due to evapotranspiration and sublimation are to date largely unquantified components of the water budget in such catchments, although they can be comparable in magnitude to glacier melt contributions to streamflow. Here, we simulate the hydrology of three high elevation headwater catchments in distinct climates in HMA over 10 years using an ecohydrological model geared towards high-mountain areas including snow and glaciers, forced with reanalysis data. Our results show that evapotranspiration and sublimation together are most important at the semi-arid site, Kyzylsu, on the northernmost slopes of the Pamir mountain range. Here, the evaporative loss amounts to 28% of the water throughput, which we define as the total water added to, or removed from the water balance within a year. In comparison, evaporative losses are 19% at the Central Himalayan site Langtang and 13% at the wettest site, 24 K, on the Southeastern Tibetan Plateau. At the three sites, respectively, sublimation removes 15%, 13% and 6% of snowfall, while evapotranspiration removes the equivalent of 76%, 28% and 19% of rainfall. In absolute terms, and across a comparable elevation range, the highest ET flux is 413 mm yr ^−1 at 24 K, while the highest sublimation flux is 91 mm yr ^−1 at Kyzylsu. During warm and dry years, glacier melt was found to only partially compensate for the annual supply deficit.

Keywords