1. Evaluating the impacts of climate change and switchgrass production on a semiarid basin.
- Author
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Goldstein, Justin C. and Tarhule, Aondover
- Subjects
SWITCHGRASS ,SOIL moisture ,ENVIRONMENTAL protection ,AGRICULTURAL development - Abstract
Climate and land use changes greatly modify hydrologic regimes. In this paper, we modelled the impacts of biofuel cultivation in the US Great Plains on a 1061-km
2 watershed using the Soil and Water Assessment Tool (SWAT) hydrologic model. The model was calibrated to monthly discharges spanning 2002-2010 and for the winter, spring, and summer seasons. SWAT was then run for a climate-change-only scenario using downscaled precipitation and a projected temperature for 16 general circulation model (GCM) runs associated with the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Special Report on Emission Scenarios A2 scenario spanning 2040-2050. SWAT was also run on a climate change plus land use change scenario in which Alamo switchgrass ( Panicum virgatum L.) replaced native range grasses, winter wheat, and rye (89% of the basin). For the climate-change-only scenario, the GCMs agreed on a monthly temperature increase of 1-2 °C by the 2042-2050 period, but they disagreed on the direction of change in precipitation. For this scenario, decreases in surface runoff during all three seasons and increases in spring and summer evapotranspiration (eT) were driven predominantly by precipitation. Increased summer temperatures also significantly contributed to changes in eT. With the addition of switchgrass, changes in surface runoff are amplified during the winter and summer, and changes in eT are amplified during all three seasons. Depending on the GCM utilized, either climate change or land use change (switchgrass cultivation) was the dominant driver of change in surface runoff while switchgrass cultivation was the major driver of changes in eT. Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
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