Energy balance distributed modelling in High Mountain Asia (HMA) is important to examine glaciological and hydrological processes and assess changes in streamflow in the current and future climate. In this study, the Physically based Distributed Snow Land and Ice Model (PDSLIM) using detailed observed meteorological data at hourly scale is employed to simulate the hydrological response of the Naltar catchment, 242.62 km2 in size, (in the Karakoram region in Pakistan to simulate its glaciers' mass balance as well as daily runoff. The results exhibited overall satisfactory performance in terms of coefficient of determination (R2 = 0.96) and Nash-Sutcliffe Efficiency (NSE=0.95) modelled against satellite-based snow cover areas, for internal model verification, in eight years. The results of runoff simulations compared for external model verification, with observed daily discharge resulted in NSE 0.90 and 0.89 for calibration and validation period respectively. Flow composition analysis revealed that the streamflow regime of Naltar catchment is composed to 40 % by glacier runoff, 42 % by subsurface runoff and 18 % by surface runoff. The eight year mean value of net mass balance exhibited a slightly negative mass balance (-0.810 +/- 0.31 m w.e. a(-1)) less pronounced than that observed globally in several continental glaciers distinct from the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets in the current climate. It seems that the 'Karakoram anomaly', i.e. the balanced to slightly positive glacier budgets observed in the region in the recent decades, a unique dynamics worldwide, has a moderate impact in the central Karakoram. Overall, the distributed energy-balance model PDSLIM, so far tested in the Alps, results to be a suitable tool to estimate energy and mass balance in the glacierized catchments of Karakoram and Himalaya and to better understand snow and ice melt runoff dynamics and floods in highly complex and glacierized mountain basins in the current and, in our research perspective, in the future climate.

Distributed modelling of snow and ice melt in the Naltar Catchment, Upper Indus basin

Ranzi R.
Conceptualization
2024-01-01

Abstract

Energy balance distributed modelling in High Mountain Asia (HMA) is important to examine glaciological and hydrological processes and assess changes in streamflow in the current and future climate. In this study, the Physically based Distributed Snow Land and Ice Model (PDSLIM) using detailed observed meteorological data at hourly scale is employed to simulate the hydrological response of the Naltar catchment, 242.62 km2 in size, (in the Karakoram region in Pakistan to simulate its glaciers' mass balance as well as daily runoff. The results exhibited overall satisfactory performance in terms of coefficient of determination (R2 = 0.96) and Nash-Sutcliffe Efficiency (NSE=0.95) modelled against satellite-based snow cover areas, for internal model verification, in eight years. The results of runoff simulations compared for external model verification, with observed daily discharge resulted in NSE 0.90 and 0.89 for calibration and validation period respectively. Flow composition analysis revealed that the streamflow regime of Naltar catchment is composed to 40 % by glacier runoff, 42 % by subsurface runoff and 18 % by surface runoff. The eight year mean value of net mass balance exhibited a slightly negative mass balance (-0.810 +/- 0.31 m w.e. a(-1)) less pronounced than that observed globally in several continental glaciers distinct from the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets in the current climate. It seems that the 'Karakoram anomaly', i.e. the balanced to slightly positive glacier budgets observed in the region in the recent decades, a unique dynamics worldwide, has a moderate impact in the central Karakoram. Overall, the distributed energy-balance model PDSLIM, so far tested in the Alps, results to be a suitable tool to estimate energy and mass balance in the glacierized catchments of Karakoram and Himalaya and to better understand snow and ice melt runoff dynamics and floods in highly complex and glacierized mountain basins in the current and, in our research perspective, in the future climate.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11379/610865
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