
Tree-ring
reconstructions of streamflow and climate and their application
to Colorado River Basin water management
Thursday,
November 13, 2008
Bureau
of Reclamation, Lower Colorado Regional Office
Boulder City, Nevada
Participant
List (PDF)
Full
workshop report (PDF)
Reclamation
staff members from the Lower Colorado region had previously traveled
to our workshops in Boulder and Tucson, so it seemed very appropriate
for us to bring our workshop series to the regional office in Boulder
City, and open it up to other river stakeholders in the Las Vegas
area. We were surprised and pleased by the high level of interest
in the workshop: including the presenters, there were about 50 participants,
making this our largest workshop. Over half of the participants
were from Reclamation (representing the regional, Boulder Canyon,
Yuma, and Phoenix offices), plus contingents from the Southern Nevada
Water Authority, Colorado River Commission of Nevada, and several
other water entities in the Colorado River basin.
The first objective
of the workshop was to provide participants with a general understanding
of how tree-ring reconstructions of streamflow are generated, to
facilitate useful interpretation and application of these data.
Connie and I presented a version of our main instructional presentation
("Tree-Ring 101"--see link below) which covered the essentials
of how we go from the tree in the field to a streamflow reconstructions,
or paleohydrology. The
second objective was to introduce participants to a range of analyses
and applications of the reconstructions for the Colorado River basin,
including recent and ongoing applications by Reclamation, which
was accomplished via several excellent presentations by our invited
presenters (see links below).
Thanks again to Paul Miller, Doug Blatchford, Steve Hvinden, Terry
Fulp, and other Reclamation staff for making this workshop possible,
to the other presenters, and to all of the workshop participants
for their interest and engagement.
Jeff Lukas, University
of Colorado & WWA
Connie Woodhouse,
University of Arizona & WWA
Workshop
Presentations (PDFs):
Tree-ring
reconstructions of streamflow and climate and their application
to Colorado River Basin water management ("Tree-Ring
101")
- Jeff Lukas, University of Colorado, and Connie Woodhouse, University
of Arizona
- Context and background
- How tree rings record hydroclimatic information
- Building the tree-ring chronology
- How reconstructions of climate and streamflow are generated
- Uncertainty in the reconstructions
- What reconstruction data are available for the CRB and the West
- What the latest reconstructions for the CRB show
Drought
analysis using reconstructed snowpack and streamflow in the Upper
Colorado basin - Tom Piechota, University of Nevada,
Las Vegas, and Glenn Tootle, University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Tree-ring
extension of hydrological records for selected eastern Nevada valleys:
building the dataset - Franco Biondi and Scotty Strachan,
University of Nevada, Reno, and Joe Leising, Southern Nevada Water
Authority [11/21: Franco Biondi's slides will be added to the PDF
soon]
Applying
tree-ring reconstructions in Reclamation water management models
- Dave Meko and Kiyomi Morino, University of Arizona
Combining
paleo-reconstructed variability with observed and projected future
flows: the hydrologic sensitivity analyses in the recent Shortage
FEIS and an ongoing study– Jim Prairie, US Bureau
of Reclamation
TreeFlow Workshops
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