Characterizing drought in California: new drought indices and scenario-testing in support of resource management

Ecological Processes
By: , and 

Links

Abstract

Introduction

California’s recent drought (2012–2016) has implications throughout the state for natural resource management and adaptation planning and has generated many discussions about drought characterization and recovery. This study characterizes drought conditions with two indices describing deficits in natural water supply and increases in landscape stress developed on the basis of water balance modeling, at a fine spatial scale to assess the variation in conditions across the entire state, and provides an in-depth evaluation for the Russian River basin in northern California to address local resource management by developing extreme drought scenarios for consideration in planning and adaptation.

Methods

We employed the USGS Basin Characterization Model to characterize drought on the basis of water supply (a measure of recharge plus runoff) and landscape stress (climatic water deficit). These were applied to the state and to the Russian River basin where antecedent soil moisture conditions were evaluated and extreme drought scenarios were developed and run through a water management and reservoir operations model to further explore impacts on water management.

Results

Drought indices indicated that as of the end of water year 2016 when reservoirs were full, additional water supply and landscape replenishment of up to three average years of precipitation in some locations was needed to return to normal conditions. Antecedent soil conditions in the Russian River were determined to contribute to very different water supply results for different years and were necessary to understand to anticipate proper watershed response to climate. Extreme drought scenarios manifested very different kinds of drought and recovery and characterization helps to guide the management response to drought.

Conclusions

These scenarios and indices illustrate how droughts differ with regard to water supply and landscape stress and how long warm droughts recover much more slowly than short very dry droughts due to the depletion of water in the soil and unsaturated zone that require filling before runoff can occur. Recognition of ongoing conditions and likelihood of recovery provides tools and information for a range of resource managers to cope with drought conditions.

Publication type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Title Characterizing drought in California: new drought indices and scenario-testing in support of resource management
Series title Ecological Processes
DOI 10.1186/s13717-017-0112-6
Volume 7
Year Published 2018
Language English
Publisher Springer
Contributing office(s) California Water Science Center
Description Article 1; 13 p.
First page 1
Last page 13
Country United States
State California
Other Geospatial Russian River watershed
Google Analytic Metrics Metrics page
Additional publication details