Significant stream chemistry response to temperature variations in a high-elevation mountain watershed
Abstract
Abstract High-elevation mountain regions, central to global freshwater supply, are experiencing more rapid warming than low-elevation locations. High-elevation streams are therefore potentially critical indicators for earth system and water chemistry response to warming. Here we present concerted hydroclimatic and biogeochemical data from Coal Creek, Colorado in the central Rocky Mountains at elevations of 2700 to 3700 m, where air temperatures have increased by about 2 °C since 1980. We analyzed water chemistry every other day from 2016 to 2019. Water chemistry data indicate distinct responses of different solutes to inter-annual hydroclimatic variations. Specifically, the concentrations of solutes from rock weathering are stable inter-annually. Solutes that are active in soils, including dissolved organic carbon, vary dramatically, with double to triple peak concentrations occurring during snowmelt and in warm years. We advocate for consistent and persistent monitoring of high elevation streams to record early glimpse of earth surface response to warming.
Local Knowledge Graph (17 entities)
Related Works
Items connected by shared entities, co-authorship, citations, or semantic similarity.
Distinct Source Water Chemistry Shapes Contrasting Concentration-Discharge Patterns
Hydrology outweighs temperature in driving production and export of dissolved carbon in a snowy mountain catchment
Hidden features: How subsurface and landscape heterogeneity govern hydrologic connectivity and stream chemistry in a montane watershed
Data from: “Significant stream chemistry response to temperature variations in a high-elevation mountain watershed”
Stable isotopes of carbon dioxide (CO2), dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC), water and concentrations of greenhouse gases in a mountainous watershed (Crested Butte, Colorado).
Solute chemistry for streams draining geomorphic features and varying land cover gradients in the East River watershed, Colorado
Colorado?s Alpine Ecosystem Health ? A Case Study on San Juan, Sawatch, and West Elk Mountains
25 Facts About Water in the San Luis Valley
Some Factors Historically Affecting The Distribution and Abundance of Fishes In The Gunnison River
Cited By (36 times, 2 in Knowledge Hub)
References (73)
3 in Knowledge Hub, 70 external
