Long-term daily stream temperature record for Scotland reveals spatio-temporal patterns in warming of rivers in the past and further warming in the future

Eva Loerke* (Corresponding Author), Ina Pohle, Mark E. Wilkinson, Mike Rivington, Douglas Wardell-Johnson, Josie Geris

*Corresponding author for this work

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Abstract

Stream temperature is directly and indirectly affected by climate change. To be able to project future changes in stream temperature, historic trends and factors influencing these trends need to be understood. There is a demand for daily data to analyse historical trends and future changes in stream temperature. However, long-term daily stream temperature data are rare and observations of coarse temporal resolution (e.g. once-a-month) do not allow for robust trend analyses. Here, we present a methodology to reconstruct a national long-term daily stream temperature record (1960–2080) from 40 years of once-a-month observations (for 45 Scottish catchments). This involved implementing climatic and hydrological variables in generalized additive models. These models were then used in combination with regional climate projections (UKCP18 Strand 3 - RCP8.5) to predict future spatio-temporal temperature patterns. The results indicate that for the Scottish dataset (i) in addition to air temperature, the dominant environmental controls on stream temperature are unique combinations for each catchment; (ii) a general increase of up to 0.06 °C/year in historic stream temperature over all catchments resulted mainly from increases in spring and summer stream temperatures; (iii) future spatial patterns in stream temperature are more homogenous and differ therefore from the past where temperatures in N Scotland were relatively lower (iv) future changes of up to +4.0 °C in annual stream temperature are strongest in those catchments which show lower stream temperature in the past (NW and W Scotland). These results are important in the context of water quality and stream temperature management. The methodology can be applied to smaller scale sites or to other national/global datasets enabling the analysis of historic trends and future changes at a high temporal resolution.
Original languageEnglish
Article number164194
Number of pages13
JournalScience of the Total Environment
Volume890
Early online date27 May 2023
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 10 Sept 2023

Bibliographical note

This work was funded by the School of Geosciences (University of Aberdeen), the Macaulay Development Trust and the Rural and Environment Science and Analytical Services division of the Scottish Government. The historic discharge data were obtained from the UK National River Flow Archive (UK Centre for Ecology and Hydrology), historic Tw from the Scottish Environmental Protection Agency. The Tw test dataset was provided by the James Hutton Institute. The downscaled UKCP18 observations and climate scenarios were provided by the James Hutton Institute and originally sourced from the UK Meteorological Office. We thank the reviewers for their constructive comments, which helped to improve the manuscript, and the editor for assistance during the editorial process.

Data Availability Statement

Data will be made available on request.

Keywords

  • Historic stream temperature trends
  • Future stream temperature changes
  • Climate change
  • Generalized additive models
  • Long-term daily record

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