Title of article :
Climate-change impacts on hydrology and nutrients
in a Danish lowland river basin
Author/Authors :
Hans Estrup Andersen a، نويسنده , , ?، نويسنده , , Brian Kronvang a، نويسنده , , S?ren E. Larsen a، نويسنده , ,
Carl Christian Hoffmann a، نويسنده , , Torben Strange Jensen b، نويسنده , , Erik Koch Rasmussen b، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
هفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Abstract :
The Mike 11–TRANS modelling system was applied to the lowland Gjern river basin in Denmark to assess climate-change
impacts on hydrology and nitrogen retention processes in watercourses, lakes and riparian wetlands. Nutrient losses from land to
surface waters were assessed using statistical models incorporating the effect of changed hydrology. Climate-change was predicted
by the ECHAM4/OPYC General Circulation Model (IPCC A2 scenario) dynamically downscaled by the Danish HIRHAM
regional climate model (25km grid) for two time slices: 1961–1990 (control) and 2071–2100 (scenario). HIRHAM predicts an
increase in mean annual precipitation of 47mm (5%) and an increase in mean annual air temperature of 3.2°C (43%).
The HIRHAM predictions were used as external forcings to the rainfall-runoff model NAM, which was set up and run for 6
subcatchments within and for the entire, Gjern river basin. Mean annual runoff from the river basin increases 27mm (7.5%,
p<0.05) when comparing the scenario to the control. Larger changes, however, were found regarding the extremes; runoff during
the wettest year in the 30-year period increased by 58mm (12.3%). The seasonal pattern is expected to change with significantly
higher runoff during winter. Summer runoff is expected to increase in predominantly groundwater fed streams and decrease in
streams with a low base-flow index. The modelled change in the seasonal hydrological pattern is most pronounced in first- or
second-order streams draining loamy catchments, which currently have a low base-flow during the summer period. Reductions of
40–70% in summer runoff are predicted for this stream type.
A statistical nutrient loss model was developed for simulating the impact of changed hydrology on diffuse nutrient losses (i.e.
losses from land to surface waters) and applied to the river basin. The simulated mean annual changes in TN loads in a loamy and a
sandy subcatchment were, respectively, +2.3kg N ha−1 (8.5%) and +1.6kg N ha−1 (6.9%).
The rainfall-runoff model and the nutrient loss model were chained with Mike 11–TRANS to simulate the combined effects of
climate-change on hydrology, nutrient losses and nitrogen retention processes at the scale of the river basin. The mean annual TN
export from the river basin increased from the control to the scenario period by 7.7%. Even though an increase in nitrogen retention
in the river system of 4.2% was simulated in the scenario period, an increased in-stream TN export resulted because of the
simulated increase in the diffuse TN transfer from the land to the surface-waters.
Keywords :
Total nitrogen , NAM , trans , Mike 11 , Nutrient retention , nutrient loss , Modelling , Climate-change , total phosphorus , runoff
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment