Hydrological drought types in cold climates : Quantitative analysis of causing factors and qualitative survey of impacts

For drought management and prediction, knowledge of causing factors and socio-economic impacts of hydrological droughts is crucial. Propagation of meteorological conditions in the hydrological cycle results in different hydrological drought types that require separate analysis. In addition to the existing hydrological drought typology, we here define two new drought types related to snow and ice. A snowmelt drought is a deficiency in the snowmelt discharge peak in spring in snow-influenced basins and a glaciermelt drought is a deficiency in the glaciermelt discharge peak in summer in glacierised basins. In 21 catchments in Austria and Norway we studied the meteorological conditions in the seasons preceding and at the time of snowmelt and glaciermelt drought events. Snowmelt droughts in Norway were mainly controlled by below-average winter precipitation, while in Austria both temperature and precipitation played a role. For glaciermelt droughts, the effect of below-average summer air temperature was dominant, both in Austria and Norway. Subsequently, we investigated the impacts of temperature-related drought types (i.e. snowmelt and glaciermelt drought, but also cold and warm snow season drought and rain-to-snow-season drought). In historical archives and drought databases for the US and Europe many impacts were found that can be attributed to these temperature-related hydrological drought types, mainly in the agriculture and electricity production (hydropower) sectors. However, drawing conclusions on the frequency of occurrence of different drought types from reported impacts is difficult, mainly because of reporting biases and the inevitably limited spatial and temporal scales of the information. Finally, this study shows that complete integration of quantitative analysis of causing factors and qualitative analysis of impacts of temperature-related droughts is not yet possible. Analysis of selected events, however, points out that it can be a promising research area if more data on drought impacts become available.

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Main Authors: Van Loon, A.F., Ploum, S.W., Parajka, J., Fleig, A.K., Garnier, E., Laaha, G., Van Lanen, H.A.J.
Format: Article/Letter to editor biblioteca
Language:English
Subjects:Life Science,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/hydrological-drought-types-in-cold-climates-quantitative-analysis
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spelling dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-4981222024-12-04 Van Loon, A.F. Ploum, S.W. Parajka, J. Fleig, A.K. Garnier, E. Laaha, G. Van Lanen, H.A.J. Article/Letter to editor Hydrology and Earth System Sciences 19 (2015) 4 ISSN: 1027-5606 Hydrological drought types in cold climates : Quantitative analysis of causing factors and qualitative survey of impacts 2015 For drought management and prediction, knowledge of causing factors and socio-economic impacts of hydrological droughts is crucial. Propagation of meteorological conditions in the hydrological cycle results in different hydrological drought types that require separate analysis. In addition to the existing hydrological drought typology, we here define two new drought types related to snow and ice. A snowmelt drought is a deficiency in the snowmelt discharge peak in spring in snow-influenced basins and a glaciermelt drought is a deficiency in the glaciermelt discharge peak in summer in glacierised basins. In 21 catchments in Austria and Norway we studied the meteorological conditions in the seasons preceding and at the time of snowmelt and glaciermelt drought events. Snowmelt droughts in Norway were mainly controlled by below-average winter precipitation, while in Austria both temperature and precipitation played a role. For glaciermelt droughts, the effect of below-average summer air temperature was dominant, both in Austria and Norway. Subsequently, we investigated the impacts of temperature-related drought types (i.e. snowmelt and glaciermelt drought, but also cold and warm snow season drought and rain-to-snow-season drought). In historical archives and drought databases for the US and Europe many impacts were found that can be attributed to these temperature-related hydrological drought types, mainly in the agriculture and electricity production (hydropower) sectors. However, drawing conclusions on the frequency of occurrence of different drought types from reported impacts is difficult, mainly because of reporting biases and the inevitably limited spatial and temporal scales of the information. Finally, this study shows that complete integration of quantitative analysis of causing factors and qualitative analysis of impacts of temperature-related droughts is not yet possible. Analysis of selected events, however, points out that it can be a promising research area if more data on drought impacts become available. en application/pdf https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/hydrological-drought-types-in-cold-climates-quantitative-analysis 10.5194/hess-19-1993-2015 https://edepot.wur.nl/374716 Life Science https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Wageningen University & Research
institution WUR NL
collection DSpace
country Países bajos
countrycode NL
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-wur-nl
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname WUR Library Netherlands
language English
topic Life Science
Life Science
spellingShingle Life Science
Life Science
Van Loon, A.F.
Ploum, S.W.
Parajka, J.
Fleig, A.K.
Garnier, E.
Laaha, G.
Van Lanen, H.A.J.
Hydrological drought types in cold climates : Quantitative analysis of causing factors and qualitative survey of impacts
description For drought management and prediction, knowledge of causing factors and socio-economic impacts of hydrological droughts is crucial. Propagation of meteorological conditions in the hydrological cycle results in different hydrological drought types that require separate analysis. In addition to the existing hydrological drought typology, we here define two new drought types related to snow and ice. A snowmelt drought is a deficiency in the snowmelt discharge peak in spring in snow-influenced basins and a glaciermelt drought is a deficiency in the glaciermelt discharge peak in summer in glacierised basins. In 21 catchments in Austria and Norway we studied the meteorological conditions in the seasons preceding and at the time of snowmelt and glaciermelt drought events. Snowmelt droughts in Norway were mainly controlled by below-average winter precipitation, while in Austria both temperature and precipitation played a role. For glaciermelt droughts, the effect of below-average summer air temperature was dominant, both in Austria and Norway. Subsequently, we investigated the impacts of temperature-related drought types (i.e. snowmelt and glaciermelt drought, but also cold and warm snow season drought and rain-to-snow-season drought). In historical archives and drought databases for the US and Europe many impacts were found that can be attributed to these temperature-related hydrological drought types, mainly in the agriculture and electricity production (hydropower) sectors. However, drawing conclusions on the frequency of occurrence of different drought types from reported impacts is difficult, mainly because of reporting biases and the inevitably limited spatial and temporal scales of the information. Finally, this study shows that complete integration of quantitative analysis of causing factors and qualitative analysis of impacts of temperature-related droughts is not yet possible. Analysis of selected events, however, points out that it can be a promising research area if more data on drought impacts become available.
format Article/Letter to editor
topic_facet Life Science
author Van Loon, A.F.
Ploum, S.W.
Parajka, J.
Fleig, A.K.
Garnier, E.
Laaha, G.
Van Lanen, H.A.J.
author_facet Van Loon, A.F.
Ploum, S.W.
Parajka, J.
Fleig, A.K.
Garnier, E.
Laaha, G.
Van Lanen, H.A.J.
author_sort Van Loon, A.F.
title Hydrological drought types in cold climates : Quantitative analysis of causing factors and qualitative survey of impacts
title_short Hydrological drought types in cold climates : Quantitative analysis of causing factors and qualitative survey of impacts
title_full Hydrological drought types in cold climates : Quantitative analysis of causing factors and qualitative survey of impacts
title_fullStr Hydrological drought types in cold climates : Quantitative analysis of causing factors and qualitative survey of impacts
title_full_unstemmed Hydrological drought types in cold climates : Quantitative analysis of causing factors and qualitative survey of impacts
title_sort hydrological drought types in cold climates : quantitative analysis of causing factors and qualitative survey of impacts
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/hydrological-drought-types-in-cold-climates-quantitative-analysis
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