The impact of climate and land cover change on the cryosphere and
hydrology of the Mackenzie River Basin, Canada
Abstract
High latitudes are predicted to continue warming at higher rates than
the global average, with major implications for northern basins where
concomitant deglaciation, permafrost thaw and vegetation shifts are
expected. The Mackenzie River Basin, a globally significant basin,
drains headwaters in the glaciated Canadian Rockies to the Arctic Ocean
and is mostly underlain by permafrost. Here, we present scenarios of
future change using the MESH distributed hydrological-cryospheric land
surface model. MESH was forced with bias-corrected, downscaled RCM
forcings and parameterized with a deep subsurface profile, organic
soils, and glaciers. The model was validated against discharge,
snowpack, and permafrost observations and used to simulate the hydrology
and permafrost dynamics over the 21st century under the RCP8.5 climate
change scenario with projected land cover change. The results show
rapidly increasing rates of permafrost thaw; most of the basin will be
permafrost-free by the 2080s. By late century, river discharges shift to
earlier and higher peaks in response to projected increases in
precipitation, temperature, snowmelt rates, despite increases in
evapotranspiration from longer snow-free seasons. Baseflow discharges
increase in winter, due to higher precipitation and increased basin
connectivity from permafrost thaw resulting in enhanced groundwater
flow. Subsurface moisture storage rises slightly but the liquid water
fraction increases dramatically, increasing sub-surface runoff and river
discharge. Canadian Rockies deglaciation reduces summer and annual
discharge in the Athabasca and Peace headwaters. Downstream and
northward of the mountain headwaters the direct impacts of climate
change on river discharge dominate over those of changing land cover and
glaciers.