Home
Scholarly Works
Influence of landscape aggregation in modelling...
Journal article

Influence of landscape aggregation in modelling snow-cover ablation and snowmelt runoff in a sub-arctic mountainous environment

Abstract

Appropriate representation of landscape heterogeneity at small to medium scales is a central issue for hydrological modelling. Two main hydrological modelling approaches, deductive and inductive, are generally applied. Here, snow-cover ablation and basin snowmelt runoff are evaluated using a combined modelling approach that includes the incorporation of detailed process understanding along with information gained from observations of basin-wide streamflow phenomena. The study site is Granger Basin, a small sub-arctic basin in the mountains of the Yukon Territory, Canada. The analysis is based on the comparison between basin-aggregated and distributed landscape representations. Results show that the distributed model based on “hydrological response” landscape units best describes the observed magnitudes of both snow-cover ablation and basin runoff, whereas the aggregated approach fails to represent the differential snowmelt rates and to describe both runoff volumes and dynamics when discontinuous snowmelt events occur.

Authors

DORNES PF; POMEROY JW; PIETRONIRO A; CAREY SK; QUINTON WL

Journal

Hydrological Sciences Journal, Vol. 53, No. 4, pp. 725–740

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Publication Date

August 1, 2008

DOI

10.1623/hysj.53.4.725

ISSN

0262-6667

Contact the Experts team