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CZOs & water security: Western U.S. lessons & global implications

CZOs & water security: Western U.S. lessons & global implications. Roger Bales Professor & Director Sierra Nevada Research Institute UC Merced. NASA-MODIS satellite image . Making a water-secure world – the three I’s. INFRASTRUCTURE to store, transport & treat water.

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CZOs & water security: Western U.S. lessons & global implications

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  1. CZOs & water security: Western U.S. lessons & global implications Roger Bales Professor & Director Sierra Nevada Research Institute UC Merced NASA-MODIS satellite image

  2. Making a water-secure world – the three I’s INFRASTRUCTUREto store, transport & treat water Stronger & more-adaptable INSTITUTIONS HARD SOFT Better & more-accessible INFORMATION

  3. Making a water-secure world – the three I’s INFRASTRUCTUREto store, transport & treat water Stronger & more-adaptable INSTITUTIONS Better & more-accessible INFORMATION Water security: the reliable availability of an acceptable quantity & quality of water for health, livelihoods & production, coupled w/ an acceptable level of water-related risks

  4. Making a water-secure world – the three I’s INFRASTRUCTUREto store, transport & treat water Stronger & more-adaptable INSTITUTIONS Ecosystem services Better & more-accessible INFORMATION

  5. Making a water-secure world – the three I’s INFRASTRUCTUREto store, transport & treat water Stronger & more-adaptable INSTITUTIONS Ecosystem services Better & more-accessible INFORMATION Water is fundamental to sustainable ecosystem services. Water management therefore translates into managing ecosystem services, and must be a fundamental goal of virtually all such efforts.

  6. Much of the water supply for the semi-arid Western U.S. derives from mountain snowpacks • Warming by +2 to +6oC drives significant changes: • rain-vs-snow storms * • snowpack amounts * • snowmelt timing * • flood risk • streamflow timing * • low baseflows • growing seasons * • recharge? • drier soil in summer • Precipitation changes? Already observed (*)

  7. Water security lies at the heart of adaptation to climate change • Includes both: • ‘hard’ options to capture & control water • ‘soft’ tools to manage demand as well as increase supply, e.g. water allocation, conservation, efficiency & land-use planning General feeling in the water community that soft opportunities will be insufficient • What California is doing: • Planning for infrastructure • Collaboration & integration in planning, management • More information-intensive decision support Southern Sierra CZO is addressing knowledge gaps in all 3 areas

  8. Critical zone observations are a foundation for water security

  9. CZO location Southern Sierra CZO is located at elevations 1750-2100 m, across the rain-snow transition, in a very productive mixed-conifer forest, with extended measurement nodes at elevations 400-2700 m UCM CZO

  10. A new generation of integrated measurements lidar low-cost sensors embedded sensor networks eddy correlation isotopes & ions satellite snowcover sap flow sediment

  11. Southern Sierra CZO MODIS image Elev., m E-W transect of flux towers 3000 2400 1800 1200 600 Shorthair Creek 2700 m Soaproot Saddle 1100 m San Joaquin Experimental Range 400 m CZO P301 2000 m CZO Main CZO site N-S transect of research catchments NEON to follow same E-W transect as CZO

  12. Year Precip, mm 3oC Increase in water yield w/ elevation 950 1800 1950 750 Implication for 2oC warmer climate: Reduce runoff by 10-40% in mixed conifer forest Wet years Dry years Decreasing temperature Increasing snow fraction Decreasing LAI Coarser soils 0.1 increase per 350 m

  13. Evapotranspiration (ET) across an elevation transect Water-balance Et (2009-10) X X X ET flux, mm yr-1 • Lower elevation is water limited • Higher elevation is cold limited • Highest current ET in rain to rain-snow-transition region of mixed conifer forest – year-round growth Elevation, m

  14. Is ET really this high? Modeled ET in Yosemite (Lutz et al., 2010) • Ecological & climate models often have ET values in the 200-500 mm range • Deficit based in part on 1-m or 2-m soil depth • CZO results suggest values in the 500-1200 mm per year range –deeper active storage of water Precip = ET + Streamflow

  15. Water & temperature limits water limit • Conventional wisdom: short growing seasons, small changes w/ elevation • Observations: • Water & cold limitation thresholds that kick in at lower/higher elevations • Sweet spot at mid elevation – only weak water/cold co-limitation • Implications • Warming alone could cause big change in growing season length • Ecohydrologic & biogeochemical processes may not be buffered against warming 300 cold limit 200 Days 100 growing season 0 water limit cold 300 200 Days 100 growing season 0 300 900 1500 2100 2700 Elevation, m

  16. Some implications of steep elevation gradients in ET & runoff for water resources Forest management is important for water yield & the timing of snowmelt runoff Downstream beneficiaries have a stake in upstream watershed management Better measurement & process understanding are critical to realizing benefits of management actions SS-CZO is addressing knowledge gaps & stimulating adaptive management

  17. Developing a new water-information system for California & beyond – American R. basin prototype Scaling CZO results for water, flood & drought management Strategically place low-cost sensors to get spatial estimates of snowcover, soil moisture & other water-balance components Network & integrate these sensors, w/ satellite data & modeling, into a single spatial instrument for water-cycle estimates in progress

  18. Southern Sierra CZO is a multi-campus program & a community resource C. Riebe, B. Jessup D. Johnson, C. Woodward J. Hopmans, P. Hartsough B. Houlton, S. Enders T. O’Geen S. Glaser, B. Kerkz N. Molotch, K. Musselman R. Bales, P. Kirchner M. Conklin, R. Lucas S. Hart, J. Blankenship A. Behre, E. Stacy C. Hunsaker C. Tague, K. Son M. Goulden, A. Kelly

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