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Snowmelt dominated regions are receiving increasing attention due to their noticeably rapid response to ongoing climate change, which raises concerns about the altered hydrological risks under climate change scenarios. This study aims to assess the climate change impacts on hydrology over two contrasted catchments in southern Québec: Acadie River and Montmorency River catchments. These river catchments represent two predominant landscapes of the St. Lawrence River watershed; an intensive farming landscape in the south shore lowlands and the forested landscape on the Canadian Shield on the north shore, respectively. In this study, a physically based hydrological model has been developed using the Cold Regions Hydrological Model (CRHM) for both of the catchments. The hydrological model outputs showed that we were able to simulate snow surveys and discharge measurements with a reasonable accuracy for both catchments. The acceptable performance of the model along with the strong physical basis of structure suggested that this model could be used for climate change sensitivity simulations. Based on the climate scenarios reviewed, a temperature increase up to 8°C and an increase in total precipitation up to 20% were analysed for both of the catchments. Both catchments were found to be sensitive to climate change, however the degree of sensitivity was found to be catchment specific. Snow processes in the Acadie River catchment were simulated to be more sensitive to warming than in the Montmorency River catchment. In case of 2°C warming, reduction in peak SWE was not be able to be compensated even by increased precipitation scenario. Given that, the Acadie River has already a mixed flow regime, even if 2°C warming is combined with an increase in precipitation, pluvial regime kept becoming more dominant, resulting in higher peaks of rain events. On the other hand, even 3°C of warming did not modify the flow regime of the Montmorency River. While there is shift towards earlier peak spring flows in both catchments, the shift was found to be more pronounced in the Acadie River. An earlier occurrence of snowmelt floods and an overall increase in winter streamflow during winter have been simulated for both catchments, which calls for renewed assessments of existing water supply and flood risk management strategies.
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Hydrological responses in cold regions are often complex and variable (both spatially and temporally) due to the complex and multiple interactions between the hydrological processes at play. Thus, there is a need to better understand and represent cold region hydrological processes within hydrological models. In this study, a physicallybased hydrological model has been developed using the Cold Regions Hydrological Model (CRHM) platform for the L’Acadie River Catchment in southern Quebec (Canada). Almost 70 % of the catchment is occupied by agricultural fields, being representative of the intensive farming landscape of the southern St-Lawrence lowlands, while the rest is mostly forested. The physical processes including blowing snow, snow interception in canopies, sublimation and snowmelt were simulated over 35 years using the CRHM platform. Hydrologic response units (HRUs), the smallest simulation spatial unit within the catchment, were derived based on the combination of land use/cover and vegetation types. Over the simulation period, considerable spatial variability was detected between agricultural and forested sites. Snow accumulation and associated snow water equivalent (SWE) were found to be higher in forested sites than agricultural sites, which can be explained by blowing snow transport from agricultural sites to the forested sites where aerodynamic roughness is greater. Higher rates of blowing snow sublimation were detected over the agricultural sites compared to snow intercepted in the forest canopies. This can be explained by the fact that there is a great amount of blowing snow over the agricultural sites, and thus available suspended snow for sublimation, while over the forested sites the snow is more firmly retained by the canopies and thus there is less blowing snow and consequently less blowing snow sublimation. In addition, although snow cover duration shows variation over the simulation period, the snow generally lasts longer in forested fields than in agricultural fields. Our findings indicating more snow in forested fields than agricultural (open) fields are contrary to the usual notion that there is less snow accumulation on forest ground due to the high rates of canopy sublimation. However, this is true for the landscapes dominated by forests, while our study area is dominated by agricultural fields, so snow erosion of agricultural fields and snow deposition in forested fields seem to compensate canopy losses. Taken together, it is shown that land use exerts a critical control on snow distributions in this type of landscape, and perhaps on possible implications for future snow hydrology of the catchment.