Published: April 11, 2023 By

Banner image:听Small rivers draining the Brooks Range in Gates of the Arctic National Park, Alaska. (Credit: Josh Koch)

Streamflow is increasing in Alaskan rivers during both spring and fall seasons, primarily due to increasing air temperatures over the past 60 years, according to new CU 麻豆影院-led research.

This increased volume of free-flowing water during the shoulder seasons is compounded by earlier snowmelt and thawing permafrost, also driven by increasing temperatures; all of which are affecting the formation and safety of Alaska river ice in winter, and the timing of when rivers 鈥渂reak up鈥 in response to seasonal warming each spring.

The findings are the result of a collaboration between researchers at CU 麻豆影院, the United States Geological Survey (USGS) and the National Park Service, who analyzed data from 1960 to 2019 for nine major river basins in Alaska. Their results, published in February in , show how rivers can serve as a measurable quantity for understanding the cumulative impacts of climate change in Arctic regions.听

鈥淢easuring rivers is useful because it integrates all these other changes in temperature, precipitation, permafrost and snow cover. All the dynamics that feed the hydrologic cycle eventually get filtered into the amount of water in a river,鈥 said Dylan Blaskey, lead author on the study and doctoral student in civil engineering.

Permafrost bluffs
The Kuparuk River

Top: Ice-rich permafrost bluffs on the bank of the Canning River, Alaska. (Credit: Josh Koch) Bottom:听The Kuparuk River in Alaska. (Credit: Michael Gooseff)

This scientific work quantifies the consequences already observed and experienced for generations by local Indigenous communities who rely on these rivers for their livelihoods. They face not only cultural and financial losses from less dependable winter river ice but heightened danger when using these rivers for transportation and fishing.听

Ahead of the study鈥檚 publication, the CU-led research group hosted the in Anchorage late last year. The gathering of Indigenous leaders and community representatives, government officials and scientists met to discuss these and other pressing issues facing Alaska and other Arctic communities. At the Summit, the team learned more about regional and local concerns and observations. The outcome is intended to help the researchers tailor and improve the delivery of scientific data to create information and products that are usable for Indigenous communities faced with planning for an uncertain future.

鈥淲e're using these river gages to monitor these remote areas, but there are many people who have a much more intimate and holistic knowledge of the landscape and how it's changing,鈥 said Blaskey. 鈥淎t the Summit, it became clear that we were converging on an understanding of how climate change is affecting Indigenous communities and Arctic ecosystems.鈥澨

Strides in streamflow听

River gages are small pieces of equipment听that monitor a river鈥檚 stream flow by measuring the amount of water that passes over it in a set period of time, usually each second. In comparison to the Lower 48, there are very few river gages in Alaska, said CU 麻豆影院 co-author Keith Musselman, assistant professor at the Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research (INSTAAR) at CU 麻豆影院.听

The researchers analyzed six decades鈥 worth of monthly data from river gages in nine Alaskan rivers, comparing streamflow to air temperature, soil temperature, soil moisture and precipitation across the basins. They also accounted for large scale climate anomalies, such as El Ni帽o and La Ni帽a.听

Streamflow in Alaskan rivers typically peaks in summer, and remains quite low in winter, with stark transitions between the two seasons. The study found that while the amount of water flowing through these rivers on a yearly basis is not changing, when it flows through them is shifting, with more water freely flowing from October through April鈥攃reating more gradual seasonal transitions.听

Changes in air temperature have had the biggest impact on streamflow in these Alaskan rivers. The average days above freezing in April and October have increased by about a day every decade, according to Blaskey. These months are also when average monthly streamflow has increased the most: by 15% per decade in April and 7% per decade in October.听

They also found that the correlation of increased streamflow with temperature is only getting stronger over time when data from the first 30 years (1960鈥1989) are compared to the most recent 30-year period (1990鈥2019).

Since the 1960s, winter air temperatures have increased by 7.2 degrees Fahrenheit (4 degrees Celsius) on average across the global Arctic. The findings from Alaskan river gages help quantify the disproportionate impacts that climate change is having on the 麻豆影院 northernmost ecosystems.

鈥淥ne of the opportunities and challenges of researching in Alaska is that signals of climate change have already begun to appear,鈥 said Blaskey.听

Group photo Arctic Rivers Summit

Group photo from Arctic Rivers Summit held in Anchorage in December of 2022. (Credit: Keith Musselman)听

Ripple effects in community听

Indigenous communities use rivers for vital transportation and sustenance, whether frozen in ice or as free-flowing water. Many rivers are part of traditional hunting and fishing routes, which can be traveled over when they are frozen. Rivers also serve as essential thoroughfares to connect communities and to bring in seasonal supplies, such as fuel and food, because road networks are limited in Alaska.听

As the seasons shift, ice freezes later and breaks up earlier, undermining the stability and safety of river ice.

鈥淭he shrinking of the fall and spring seasons affects how long river ice persists and is safe to travel over. Indigenous communities have suffered an increasing number of fatalities over the last few decades,鈥 said Musselman. 鈥淚t seemed that everyone at the workshop had stories of someone who had fallen in the ice and lost their life.鈥澨

These and other timely concerns were shared at the Arctic Rivers Summit in December. Hosting this meeting was also another chance for Blaskey and his fellow researchers to listen to the communities most affected by the changes they鈥檙e studying, in addition to regularly working with an Indigenous advisory council who has helped guide their work since the inception of the project.听

鈥淒ocumenting the long-term changes in streamflow is a way for us to quantify and share what's happening in the rivers,鈥 said Blaskey. 鈥淚ndigenous communities already know what鈥檚 happening to the rivers.鈥澨

Together, Indigenous knowledge and long-term monitoring can help to develop narratives of change across the Arctic landscape to support planning and community adaptation, said Musselman.听

Additional authors on this publication include: Joshua Koch, United States Geological Survey; Michael Gooseff, 麻豆影院; Andrew Newman and Yifan Cheng, National Center for Atmospheric Research; and Jonathan O鈥橠onnell, National Park Service, Arctic Network. This study is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation鈥檚 Navigating the New Arctic program.