Please wait a minute...
Journal of Arid Land
Research Articles     
Impacts of temperature and precipitation on runoff in the Tarim River during the past 50 years
YuTing FAN, YaNing CHEN, WeiHong LI, HuaiJun WANG, XinGong LI
1 State Key Laboratory of Desert and Oasis Ecology, Xinjiang Institute of Ecology and Geography, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Urumqi 830011, China; 2 Graduate University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049, China; 3 Department of Geography, University of Kansas Lawrence, KS 66045, USA
Download:   PDF(537KB)
Export: BibTeX | EndNote (RIS)      

Abstract  The relationship between climate change and water resources in?the Tarim River was analyzed by combining the temperature, precipitation and streamflow data from 1957 to 2007 from the four headstreams of the Tarim River (Aksu, Hotan,?Yarkant and Kaidu rivers) in the study area. The long-term trend of the hydrological?time series including temperature, precipitation and streamflow were studied using correlation analysis and partial correlations analysis. Holt double exponential smoothing was used to fit the trends between streamflow and the two climatic factors of Aksu River, Hotan River and Yarkant River. The streamflow of the main stream was forecasted by Autoregressive Integrated Moving Average Model (ARIMA) modeling by the method of time series analysis. The results show that the temperature experienced a trend of monotonic rising. The precipitation and runoff of the four headstreams of the Tarim River increased, while the inflow to the headstreams increased and the inflow into the Tarim River decreased. Changes of temperature and precipitation had a significant impact on runoff into the four headstreams of the Tarim River: the precipitation had a positive impact on water flow in the Aksu River, Hotan River and Kaidu River, while the temperature had a positive impact on water flow in the Yarkant River. The results of Holt double exponential smoothing showed that the correlation between the independent variable and dependent variable was relatively close after the model was fitted to the headstreams, of which only the runoff and temperature values of Hotan River showed a significant negative?correlation. The forecasts by the ARIMA model for 50 years of annual runoff at the Allar station followed the pattern of the measured data for the same years. The short-term forecasts beyond the observed series adequately captured the pattern in the data and showed a decreasing tendency in the Tarim River flow of 3.07% every ten years. The results showed that global warming accelerated the water recharge process of the headstreams. The special hydrological characteristics of the arid area determined the significant association between streamflow and the two climatic factors studied. Strong glacier retreat is likely to bring a series of flood disasters within the study area.

Key wordsbiofilter      greenhouse gas      methane      manure storage     
Published: 07 September 2011
Corresponding Authors:
Cite this article:

YuTing FAN, YaNing CHEN, WeiHong LI, HuaiJun WANG, XinGong LI. Impacts of temperature and precipitation on runoff in the Tarim River during the past 50 years. Journal of Arid Land, 2011, 3(3): 220-230.

URL:

http://jal.xjegi.com/10.3724/SP.J.1227.2011.00220     OR     http://jal.xjegi.com/Y2011/V3/I3/220

[1] WANG Bo, LI Yuwei, BAO Yuhai. Grazing alters sandy soil greenhouse gas emissions in a sand-binding area of the Hobq Desert, China[J]. Journal of Arid Land, 2022, 14(5): 576-588.
[2] Yunxiao BAI, Xiaobing LI, Wanyu WEN, Xue MI, Ruihua LI, Qi HUANG, Meng ZHANG. CO2, CH4 and N2O flux changes in degraded grassland soil of Inner Mongolia, China[J]. Journal of Arid Land, 2018, 10(3): 347-361.
[3] HASSOUMA Mohamed, SER?A Dominique, GUéRIN Frédéric, BLANFORT Vincent, LECOMTE Philippe, TOURé Ibra, ICKOWICZ Alexandre, J MANLAY Rapha?l, BERNOUX Martial, VAYSSIèRES Jonathan. Livestock induces strong spatial heterogeneity of soil CO2, N2O and CH4 emissions within a semi-arid sylvo-pastoral landscape in West Africa[J]. Journal of Arid Land, 2017, 9(2): 210-221.
[4] Qiang HUANG, Qiang ZHANG, Nazim CICEK, Danny MANN. Biofilter: a promising tool for mitigating methane emission from manure storage[J]. Journal of Arid Land, 2011, 3(1): 61-70.