Technical Note: Glacial influence in tropical mountain hydrosystems evidenced by the diurnal cycle in water levels

dc.contributor.authorSophie Cauvy‐Fraunié
dc.contributor.authorThomas Condom
dc.contributor.authorAntoine Rabatel
dc.contributor.authorMarcos Villacís
dc.contributor.authorDean Jacobsen
dc.contributor.authorOlivier Dangles
dc.coverage.spatialBolivia
dc.date.accessioned2026-03-22T14:09:41Z
dc.date.available2026-03-22T14:09:41Z
dc.date.issued2013
dc.descriptionCitaciones: 39
dc.description.abstractAbstract. Worldwide, the rapid shrinking of glaciers in response to ongoing climate change is modifying the glacial meltwater contribution to hydrosystems in glacierized catchments. Determining the influence of glacial runoff to streams is therefore of critical importance to evaluate potential impact of glacier retreat on water quality and aquatic biota. This task has challenged both glacier hydrologists and ecologists over the last 20 yr due to both structural and functional complexity of the glacier–stream system interface. Here we propose quantifying the diurnal cycle amplitude of the streamflow to determine the glacial influence in glacierized catchments. We performed water-level measurements using water pressure loggers over 10 months at 30 min time steps in 15 stream sites in 2 glacier-fed catchments in the Ecuadorian Andes (> 4000 m a.s.l.) where no perennial snow cover is observed outside the glaciers. For each stream site, we performed wavelet analyses on water-level time series, determined the scale-averaged wavelet power spectrum at 24 h scale and defined three metrics, namely the power, frequency and temporal clustering of the diurnal flow variation. The three metrics were then compared to the percentage of the glacier cover in the catchments, a metric of glacial influence widely used in the literature. As expected, we found that the diurnal variation power of glacier-fed streams decreased downstream with the addition of non-glacial tributaries. We also found that the diurnal variation power and the percentage of the glacier cover in the catchment were significantly positively correlated. Furthermore, we found that our method permits the detection of glacial signal in supposedly non-glacial sites, thereby revealing glacial meltwater resurgence. While we specifically focused on the tropical Andes in this paper, our approach to determine glacial influence may have potential applications in temperate and arctic glacierized catchments. The measure of diurnal water amplitude therefore appears as a powerful and cost-effective tool to understand the hydrological links between glaciers and hydrosystems better and assess the consequences of rapid glacier shrinking.
dc.identifier.doi10.5194/hess-17-4803-2013
dc.identifier.urihttps://doi.org/10.5194/hess-17-4803-2013
dc.identifier.urihttps://andeanlibrary.org/handle/123456789/44896
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherCopernicus Publications
dc.relation.ispartofHydrology and earth system sciences
dc.sourceCentre de Gestion Scientifique
dc.subjectMeltwater
dc.subjectGlacier
dc.subjectGlacial period
dc.subjectEnvironmental science
dc.subjectStreamflow
dc.subjectHydrology (agriculture)
dc.subjectClimate change
dc.subjectTributary
dc.subjectPhysical geography
dc.subjectGeology
dc.titleTechnical Note: Glacial influence in tropical mountain hydrosystems evidenced by the diurnal cycle in water levels
dc.typearticle

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