Votre recherche
Résultats 103 ressources
-
Abstract Accelerating mountain glacier recession in a warming climate threatens the sustainability of mountain water resources. The extent to which groundwater will provide resilience to these water resources is unknown, in part due to a lack of data and poorly understood interactions between groundwater and surface water. Here we address this knowledge gap by linking climate, glaciers, surface water, and groundwater into an integrated model of the Shullcas Watershed, Peru, in the tropical Andes, the region experiencing the most rapid mountain‐glacier retreat on Earth. For a range of climate scenarios, our model projects that glaciers will disappear by 2100. The loss of glacial meltwater will be buffered by relatively consistent groundwater discharge, which only receives minor recharge (~2%) from glacier melt. However, increasing temperature and associated evapotranspiration, alongside potential decreases in precipitation, will decrease groundwater recharge and streamflow, particularly for the RCP 8.5 emission scenario. , Plain Language Summary Mountain regions play an important role in water supply, because meltwater from snow and ice feeds rivers during dry periods. Groundwater (water stored in the pore spaces of soils and rock), which flows into rivers, is also an important store of water in mountain areas and may help to protect water resources against the negative impacts of shrinking mountain glaciers. We used extensive field measurements and computer modeling of the Shullcas Watershed in the Peruvian Andes to determine the current and future role of groundwater in the face of climate change. Our model projects that glaciers in our study area will disappear by 2100. The loss of glacier meltwater is buffered in the short term (~30 years) by consistent groundwater flow to rivers. However, in the long term (>60 years), precipitation is expected to decrease and rising temperatures lead to increased evaporation and water use by plants. These factors reduce groundwater recharge and storage, causing dry season streamflow to drop. , Key Points Groundwater accounts for a large fraction of streamflow and only receives minor (~2%) recharge from glaciers in the study catchment in Peru As meltwater decreases, groundwater provides consistent discharge in the near term (~30 years), becoming a larger fraction of streamflow In the long term (>60 years), groundwater storage and discharge decrease in response to higher evapotranspiration and lower precipitation
-
Abstract. Climate models predict amplified warming at high elevations in low latitudes, making tropical glacierized regions some of the most vulnerable hydrological systems in the world. Observations reveal decreasing streamflow due to retreating glaciers in the Andes, which hold 99 % of all tropical glaciers. However, the timescales over which meltwater contributes to streamflow and the pathways it takes – surface and subsurface – remain uncertain, hindering our ability to predict how shrinking glaciers will impact water resources. Two major contributors to this uncertainty are the sparsity of hydrologic measurements in tropical glacierized watersheds and the complication of hydrograph separation where there is year-round glacier melt. We address these challenges using a multi-method approach that employs repeat hydrochemical mixing model analysis, hydroclimatic time series analysis, and integrated watershed modeling. Each of these approaches interrogates distinct timescale relationships among meltwater, groundwater, and stream discharge. Our results challenge the commonly held conceptual model that glaciers buffer discharge variability. Instead, in a subhumid watershed on Volcán Chimborazo, Ecuador, glacier melt drives nearly all the variability in discharge (Pearson correlation coefficient of 0.89 in simulations), with glaciers contributing a broad range of 20 %–60 % or wider of discharge, mostly (86 %) through surface runoff on hourly timescales, but also through infiltration that increases annual groundwater contributions by nearly 20 %. We further found that rainfall may enhance glacier melt contributions to discharge at timescales that complement glacier melt production, possibly explaining why minimum discharge occurred at the study site during warm but dry El Niño conditions, which typically heighten melt in the Andes. Our findings caution against extrapolations from isolated measurements: stream discharge and glacier melt contributions in tropical glacierized systems can change substantially at hourly to interannual timescales, due to climatic variability and surface to subsurface flow processes.
-
Abstract The management of sugar maple (Acer saccharum) at the northern edge of its range is mainly oriented toward timber production, from trees of higher grades. However, both the quality of mature trees in natural stands and how the quality may vary depending on the silvicultural treatment are unknown, especially under northern conditions. The objective of this study was to describe the variation in stem quality of mature maple trees (diameter >33 cm) according to climatic, geographic or soil variables, and to evaluate the effects of a first selection cutting cycle on this quality. Annual temperature (1.7–4.1° C) was the most important variable explaining differences in the proportion of higher-grade trees, with a 16 percent gain associated with every additional increase in degrees Celsius. The practice of a first selection cutting was associated with an 11 percent gain in this proportion. Although the actual proportion of high-quality trees was below 35 percent on the coolest sites, a proper tree selection through silviculture could likely improve this proportion in future decades, whereas the potential effects of climate change are unclear.
-
TanDEM-X digital elevation model (DEM) is a global DEM released by the German Aerospace Center (DLR) at outstanding resolution of 12 m. However, the procedure for its creation involves the combination of several DEMs from acquisitions spread between 2011 and 2014, which casts doubt on its value for precise glaciological change detection studies. In this work we present TanDEM-X DEM as a high-quality product ready for use in glaciological studies. We compare it to Aerial Laser Scanning (ALS)-based dataset from April 2013 (1 m), used as the ground-truth reference, and Advanced Spaceborne Thermal Emission and Reflection Radiometer (ASTER) V003 DEM and SRTM v3 DEM (both 30 m), serving as representations of past glacier states. We use a method of sub-pixel coregistration of DEMs by Nuth and Kääb (2011) to determine the geometric accuracy of the products. In addition, we propose a slope-aspect heatmap-based workflow to remove the errors resulting from radar shadowing over steep terrain. Elevation difference maps obtained by subtraction of DEMs are analyzed to obtain accuracy assessments and glacier mass balance reconstructions. The vertical accuracy (± standard deviation) of TanDEM-X DEM over non-glacierized area is very good at 0.02 ± 3.48 m. Nevertheless, steep areas introduce large errors and their filtering is required for reliable results. The 30 m version of TanDEM-X DEM performs worse than the finer product, but its accuracy, −0.08 ± 7.57 m, is better than that of SRTM and ASTER. The ASTER DEM contains errors, possibly resulting from imperfect DEM creation from stereopairs over uniform ice surface. Universidad Glacier has been losing mass at a rate of −0.44 ± 0.08 m of water equivalent per year between 2000 and 2013. This value is in general agreement with previously reported mass balance estimated with the glaciological method for 2012–2014.
-
Local scour is the removal of soil around bridge foundations under the erosive action of flowing water. This hydraulic risk has raised awareness of the need for developing continuous monitoring techniques to estimate scour depth around bridge piers and abutments. One of the emerging techniques is based on monitoring the vibration frequency of either bridge piers or a driven sensor in the riverbed. The sensor proposed in this study falls into the second category. Some unresolved issues are investigated: the effect of the geometry and material of the sensor, the effect of the embedded length and the effect of soil type. To this end, extensive laboratory tests are performed using rods of different materials, with various geometries and lengths. These tests are conducted in both dry sand and a soft clayey soil. Since the sensor will be placed in the riverbed, it is crucial to evaluate the effect of immersed conditions on its response. A numerical 3D finite-element model was developed and compared against experimental data. This model was then used to compute the ‘wet’ frequencies of the sensor. Finally, based on both the experimental and numerical results, an equivalent cantilever model is proposed to correlate the variation of the frequency of the sensor to the scour depth.
-
Abstract Rivers typically present heterogeneous bed material, but the effects of sediment nonuniformity on river bar characteristics are still unclear. This work investigates the impact of sediment size heterogeneity on alternate bars with a morphodynamic numerical model. The model is first used to reproduce a laboratory experiment showing alternate bar formation with nonuniform bed material. Subsequently, the influence of sediment size heterogeneity on alternate bars is investigated distinguishing hybrid from free bars, definition based on the presence/absence of morphodynamic forcing, considering the results of nine scenarios. In four of them, a transverse obstacle is used to generate forcing. The computations are carried out with the Telemac‐Mascaret system solving the two‐dimensional shallow‐water equations with a finite element approach, accounting for horizontal and vertical sediment sorting processes. The results show that sediment heterogeneity affects free migrating and hybrid bars in a different way. The difference lies in the presence/absence of a migration front, so that distinct relations between bed topography, bed shear stress, and sediment sorting are obtained. Sediment sorting and associated planform redistribution of bed roughness only slightly modify free migrating bar morphodynamics, whereas hybrid bars are greatly impacted, with decreased amplitude and increased wavelength. Increased sediment size heterogeneity increases the degree of sediment sorting, while the sorting pattern remains the same for both free and hybrid bars. Moreover, it produces averagely higher, longer, and faster free bars, while in the case of hybrid bars their wavelength is increased but no general trend can be determined for their amplitude. , Key Points Free bars and hybrid bars show distinct topography, bed shear stress, sediment transport, and sediment sorting patterns Increased sediment heterogeneity induces longer free/hybrid bars, higher free bars but no general trend for the hybrid bar amplitude Sediment sorting does not impact the averaged free bar characteristics, while hybrid bars become longer and damped
-
The slide of granular material in nature and engineering can happen under air (subaerial), under a liquidlike water (submerged), or a transition between these two regimes, where a subaerial slide enters a liquid and becomes submerged. Here, we experimentally investigate these three slide regimes (i.e., subaerial, submerged, and transitional) in two dimensions, for various slope angles, material types, and bed roughness. The goal is to shed light on the complex morphodynamics and flow structure of these granular flows and also to provide comprehensive benchmarks for the validation and parametrization of the numerical models. The slide regime is found to be a major controller of the granular morphodynamics (e.g., shape evolution and internal flow structure). The time history of the runout distance for the subaerial and submerged cases present a similar three-phase trend (with acceleration, steady flow, and deceleration phases) tough with different spatiotemporal scales. Compared to the subaerial cases, the submerged cases show longer runout time and shorter final runout distances. The transitional trends, however, show additional deceleration and reacceleration. The observations suggest that the impact of slide angle, material type, and bed roughness on the morphodynamics is less significant where the material interacts with water. Flow structure, extracted using a granular particle image velocimetry technique, shows a relatively power-law velocity profile for the subaerial condition and strong circulations for the submerged condition. An unsteady theoretical model based on the µ(I) rheology is developed and is shown to be effective in the prediction of the average velocity of the granular mass.
-
La thérapie cognitive-comportementale (TCC) pour le trouble de stress post-traumatique (TSPT) est validée empiriquement (Forman-Hoffman et al., 2018). Toutefois, à notre connaissance, aucune revue de la littérature ne s’intéresse précisément à l’efficacité à long terme de la TCC du TSPT. Il importe pourtant de s’assurer avec une vision d’ensemble de la durabilité des gains thérapeutiques afin de vérifier si la TCC du TSPT permet d’éviter un retour des symptômes après la thérapie. Des études ont observé que les gains thérapeutiques se maintiendraient entre 6 et 20 mois après la TCC (voir, p. ex., Hembree & Foa, 2000; Kline, Cooper, Rytwinksi, & Feeny, 2018) et qu’ils pourraient même s’améliorer (Hembree & Foa, 2000). La présente revue de littérature identifie des études de traitement, des revues de littérature et des méta-analyses abordant l’efficacité à long terme d’une TCC du TSPT. Ce projet répertorie également les facteurs influençant l’efficacité à long terme d’une TCC individuelle, de groupe et par vidéoconférence. Des articles publiés entre 2010 et 2018 ont été cherchés dans les bases de données MEDLINE et PsycINFO. Deux constats se dégagent de cette revue, soit que la TCC permettrait de traiter le TSPT de façon durable et que certaines variables comme la dépression ou l’anxiété comorbide, un âge avancé, des difficultés de sommeil persistantes et le fait de tarder à aller chercher de l’aide sont associées à une moins bonne efficacité à long terme de la TCC du TSPT. Il est possible que le développement d’habiletés d’adaptation en thérapie soit un facteur de maintien et même d’amélioration des gains après la TCC.