The importance of snow sublimation on a Himalayan glacier

Publication date

2018-08-24

Authors

Stigter, Emmy E.ISNI 000000049279592X
Litt, M.H.V.ISNI 0000000457277342
Steiner, Jakob FriedrichISNI 0000000506275002
Bonekamp, P.N.J.ISNI 0000000493349059
Shea, Joseph M.
Bierkens, MarcORCID 0000-0002-7411-6562ISNI 0000000109834798
Immerzeel, WalterORCID 0000-0002-2010-9543ISNI 0000000108662891

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Abstract

Snow sublimation is a loss of water from the snowpack to the atmosphere. So far, snow sublimation has remained unquantified in the Himalaya, prohibiting a full understanding of the water balance and glacier mass balance. Hence, we measured surface latent heat fluxes with an eddy covariance system on Yala Glacier (5,350 m a.s.l) in the Nepalese Himalaya to quantify the role snow sublimation plays in the water and glacier mass budget. Observations reveal that cumulative sublimation is 32 mm for a 32-day period from October to November 2016, which is high compared to observations in other regions in the world. Multiple turbulent flux parameterizations were subsequently tested against this observed sublimation. The bulk-aerodynamic method offered the best performance, and we subsequently used this method to estimate cumulative sublimation and evaporation at the location of the eddy covariance system for the 2016–2017 winter season, which is 125 and 9 mm respectively. This is equivalent to 21% of the annual snowfall. In addition, the spatial variation of total daily sublimation over Yala Glacier was simulated with the bulk-aerodynamic method for a humid and non-humid day. Required spatial fields of meteorological variables were obtained from high-resolution WRF simulations of the region in combination with field observations. The cumulative daily sublimation at the location of the eddy covariance system equals the simulated sublimation averaged over the entire glacier. Therefore, this location appears to be representative for Yala Glacier sublimation. The spatial distribution of sublimation is primarily controlled by wind speed. Close to the ridge of Yala Glacier cumulative daily sublimation is a factor 1.7 higher than at the location of the eddy covariance system, whereas it is a factor 0.8 lower at the snout of the glacier. This illustrates that the fraction of snowfall returned to the atmosphere may be much higher than 21% at wind-exposed locations. This is a considerable loss of water and illustrates the importance and need to account for sublimation in future hydrological and mass balance studies in the Himalaya.

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Stigter, E E, Litt, M H V, Steiner, J F, Bonekamp, P N J, Shea, J M, Bierkens, M F P & Immerzeel, W W 2018, 'The importance of snow sublimation on a Himalayan glacier', Frontiers in Earth Science, Cryosphere, vol. 6, 108. https://doi.org/10.3389/feart.2018.00108