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  • Assessing the impacts of cl...
    Charlton, Matthew B.; Arnell, Nigel W.

    Journal of hydrology (Amsterdam), 11/2014, Letnik: 519
    Journal Article

    •Future flows in English catchments modelled using UKCP09 climate projections.•Large range in hydrological behaviour between plausible climate scenarios.•Catchment response to change depends on geology and baseline water balance.•Changes in high flows largely driven by changes in winter precipitation.•Changes in low flows determined by changes in summer precipitation and temperature. This paper presents an assessment of the effects of climate change on river flow regimes in representative English catchments, using the UKCP09 climate projections. These comprise a set of 10,000 coherent climate scenarios, used here (i) to evaluate the distribution of potential changes in hydrological behaviour and (ii) to construct relationships between indicators of climate change and hydrological change. The study uses six catchments, and focuses on change in average flow, high flow (Q5) and low flow (Q95). There is a large range in hydrological change in each catchment between the plausible UKCP09 climate projections, with differences between catchments largely due to differences in catchment geology and baseline water balance. The range in change between the UKCP09 projections is in most catchments smaller than the range between changes with scenarios based on the CMIP3 ensemble of climate models (although the shape of the distribution of changes is different), and earlier UK scenarios produce changes that tend towards the lower (drier) end of the UKCP09 range. The difference between emissions scenarios is small compared to the range across the 10,000 scenarios. Changes in high flows are largely driven by changes in winter precipitation, whilst changes in low flows are determined by changes in summer precipitation and temperature.