Prediction of River Water Temperature and its Dependence on Hydro-Meteorological Factors

Authors

  • Aldona Jurgelėnaitė
  • Darius Jakimavičius Lithuanian Energy Institute

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5755/j01.erem.68.2.6178

Keywords:

river, climatic parameters, water temperature, forecast, HBV

Abstract

Rivers will be among the most sensitive of all ecosystems to the effects of climate change as they are heated by processes similar to those warming the Earth's atmosphere. The river water and air temperatures follow each other closely. The life cycle of lotic biota is regulated by two major physical factors: water temperature and hydraulic conditions. Any change in hydraulic pattern that leads to an alteration of the established thermal regime of a lotic ecosystem will ultimately lead to a dramatic change in the composition and survival of lotic biota. In order to assess the impacts of potential climate change on thermal regime of water bodies, it is important to know the long range forecasts for various climatic parameters. For this purpose the modelling of water discharge and forecasting of future changes are performed. This paper provides the long-term changes in the Lithuanian river water temperature according to two models and emissions scenarios. This paper evaluates the changes of warm season (May-October) water temperature and heat runoff of Lithuanian rivers (Nemunas, Merkys and Dubysa) with different thermal regimes at the end of the 21st century (2071–2100) comparing to the climate normal period (1961-1990) using two climate change models (ECHAM5 and HadCM3 global climate models and the A2 and B1 emissions scenarios) and hydrological modelling (HBV model).

DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.5755/j01.erem.68.2.6178

Author Biographies

Aldona Jurgelėnaitė

Junior research associate of Hydrology Laboratory at the Lithuanian Energy Institute.

Main research area: research of water resources, hydrology.

Darius Jakimavičius, Lithuanian Energy Institute

Research associate of Hydrology Laboratory at the Lithuanian Energy Institute.

Main research area: hydrological modeling, climate impact on water resources, hydrology.

 

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Published

2014-06-30

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Section

Articles