Hydrological impacts of interannual variations in surface soil freezing processes in the upper Nu–Salween River basin

The upper Nu–Salween River basin in the Tibetan Plateau is mainly covered with seasonal frozen soils. We used daily surface freeze–thaw states, detected from Special Sensor Microwave/Imager (SSM/I) daily brightness temperature data, to analyze the variations in surface freeze–thaw states and the rel...

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Main Authors: Xian Luo, Xuemei Fan, Xuan Ji, Yungang Li
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2020-01-01
Series:Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15230430.2019.1698893
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spelling doaj-a52467fbfb1447a293b38f80b1b3b4cf2021-02-08T14:09:11ZengTaylor & Francis GroupArctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research1523-04301938-42462020-01-0152111210.1080/15230430.2019.16988931698893Hydrological impacts of interannual variations in surface soil freezing processes in the upper Nu–Salween River basinXian Luo0Xuemei Fan1Xuan Ji2Yungang Li3Yunnan UniversityYunnan UniversityYunnan UniversityYunnan UniversityThe upper Nu–Salween River basin in the Tibetan Plateau is mainly covered with seasonal frozen soils. We used daily surface freeze–thaw states, detected from Special Sensor Microwave/Imager (SSM/I) daily brightness temperature data, to analyze the variations in surface freeze–thaw states and the relationship with air temperature. We also examined baseflow to explore the influences of interannual variations in the start time of soil freezing on hydrological processes. The results showed that (1) interannual air temperature fluctuations led to differences in the area and start time of surface freezing. When surface soil froze, flow was mainly dependent on existing groundwater storage. (2) The interannual variation in the surface freezing time directly affected the flow generation processes. When soil water froze and remained in the frozen layer, it was hard to generate surface flow, so flow mainly consisted of baseflow, causing the proportion of the baseflow in the total flow to gradually increase. (3) The surface freeze–thaw states obtained from the passive microwave remote sensing data may be applied to support further research on the hydrological impacts of freeze–thaw cycle variations in plateau mountain basins.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15230430.2019.1698893freezing processespassive microwave remote sensinghydrological characteristicsclimate changeupper nu–salween river basin
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Xian Luo
Xuemei Fan
Xuan Ji
Yungang Li
spellingShingle Xian Luo
Xuemei Fan
Xuan Ji
Yungang Li
Hydrological impacts of interannual variations in surface soil freezing processes in the upper Nu–Salween River basin
Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research
freezing processes
passive microwave remote sensing
hydrological characteristics
climate change
upper nu–salween river basin
author_facet Xian Luo
Xuemei Fan
Xuan Ji
Yungang Li
author_sort Xian Luo
title Hydrological impacts of interannual variations in surface soil freezing processes in the upper Nu–Salween River basin
title_short Hydrological impacts of interannual variations in surface soil freezing processes in the upper Nu–Salween River basin
title_full Hydrological impacts of interannual variations in surface soil freezing processes in the upper Nu–Salween River basin
title_fullStr Hydrological impacts of interannual variations in surface soil freezing processes in the upper Nu–Salween River basin
title_full_unstemmed Hydrological impacts of interannual variations in surface soil freezing processes in the upper Nu–Salween River basin
title_sort hydrological impacts of interannual variations in surface soil freezing processes in the upper nu–salween river basin
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research
issn 1523-0430
1938-4246
publishDate 2020-01-01
description The upper Nu–Salween River basin in the Tibetan Plateau is mainly covered with seasonal frozen soils. We used daily surface freeze–thaw states, detected from Special Sensor Microwave/Imager (SSM/I) daily brightness temperature data, to analyze the variations in surface freeze–thaw states and the relationship with air temperature. We also examined baseflow to explore the influences of interannual variations in the start time of soil freezing on hydrological processes. The results showed that (1) interannual air temperature fluctuations led to differences in the area and start time of surface freezing. When surface soil froze, flow was mainly dependent on existing groundwater storage. (2) The interannual variation in the surface freezing time directly affected the flow generation processes. When soil water froze and remained in the frozen layer, it was hard to generate surface flow, so flow mainly consisted of baseflow, causing the proportion of the baseflow in the total flow to gradually increase. (3) The surface freeze–thaw states obtained from the passive microwave remote sensing data may be applied to support further research on the hydrological impacts of freeze–thaw cycle variations in plateau mountain basins.
topic freezing processes
passive microwave remote sensing
hydrological characteristics
climate change
upper nu–salween river basin
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15230430.2019.1698893
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AT xuemeifan hydrologicalimpactsofinterannualvariationsinsurfacesoilfreezingprocessesintheuppernusalweenriverbasin
AT xuanji hydrologicalimpactsofinterannualvariationsinsurfacesoilfreezingprocessesintheuppernusalweenriverbasin
AT yungangli hydrologicalimpactsofinterannualvariationsinsurfacesoilfreezingprocessesintheuppernusalweenriverbasin
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