4.7 Article

Insights into mountain precipitation and snowpack from a basin-scale wireless-sensor network

Journal

WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH
Volume 53, Issue 8, Pages 6626-6641

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1002/2016WR018825

Keywords

wireless-sensor network; rain-snow transition; mountain precipitation; mountain snow

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation (NSF) [EAR-1126887]
  2. Southern Sierra Critical Zone Observatory [EAR-0725097]
  3. California Department of Water Resources [UC10-3]
  4. USDA-ARS CRIS Snow and Hydrologic Processes in the Intermountain West [5362-13610-008-00D]
  5. UC Office of the President's Multi-Campus Research Programs and Initiatives through the UC Water Security and Sustainability Research Initiative [MR-15-328473]

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A spatially distributed wireless-sensor network, installed across the 2154 km(2) portion of the 5311 km(2) American River basin above 1500 m elevation, provided spatial measurements of temperature, relative humidity, and snow depth in the Sierra Nevada, California. The network consisted of 10 sensor clusters, each with 10 measurement nodes, distributed to capture the variability in topography and vegetation cover. The sensor network captured significant spatial heterogeneity in rain versus snow precipitation for water-year 2014, variability that was not apparent in the more limited operational data. Using daily dew-point temperature to track temporal elevational changes in the rain-snow transition, the amount of snow accumulation at each node was used to estimate the fraction of rain versus snow. This resulted in an underestimate of total precipitation below the 0 degrees C dew-point elevation, which averaged 1730 m across 10 precipitation events, indicating that measuring snow does not capture total precipitation. We suggest blending lower elevation rain gauge data with higher-elevation sensor-node data for each event to estimate total precipitation. Blended estimates were on average 15-30% higher than using either set of measurements alone. Using data from the current operational snow-pillow sites gives even lower estimates of basin-wide precipitation. Given the increasing importance of liquid precipitation in a warming climate, a strategy that blends distributed measurements of both liquid and solid precipitation will provide more accurate basin-wide precipitation estimates, plus spatial and temporal patters of snow accumulation and melt in a basin.

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