Land & Environment

Between the Lines: Tree Rings Hold Clues about a River's Past

By analyzing centuries-old growth rings, USU researchers are extracting data about monthly streamflow trends from periods long before the early 1900s when recorded observations began.

Hydrologists are looking centuries into the past to better understand an increasingly uncertain water future.

By analyzing centuries-old growth rings from trees in the Intermountain West, researchers at Utah State University are extracting data about monthly streamflow trends from periods long before the early 1900s when recorded observations began.

Their findings were published Jan. 6 in the Journal of Hydrology and, for the first time, show that monthly streamflow data can be reconstructed from annual tree-ring chronologies — some of which date back to the 1400s.

“By linking tree rings and flow during the past 100 years when we have recorded observations, we can use trees as a tool for measuring flow long before there were gauges on the rivers,” said USU’s James Stagge, a hydrologist and civil engineer who led the research. “Our study takes this one step further and uses different tree species and locations to reconstruct monthly flow, rather than annual flow.”

Knowing monthly streamflow, the authors explain, is key to making better-informed decisions about water use and management. In Utah and around the world, populations in arid climates depend on seasonal and often inconsistent water supplies for agriculture and urban use.

“One data point per year gives a very limited picture,” said co-author David Rosenberg, an associate professor of civil and environmental engineering at USU. “Decisions about water management happen much more frequently than just once per year. Water managers have to make decisions every month, every week, sometimes every day.”

To fill in the missing monthly data, Stagge and co-authors built a model that reconstructs monthly streamflow for three rivers in Northern Utah. The reconstructions are available to the public at www.paleoflow.org and show monthly streamflows dating back to 1605 for the Logan River and as far back as 1400 for the Bear and Weber rivers.

The team used tree-ring chronologies from seven species selected from a range of locations and elevations. Stagge says different tree species at different elevations respond to the changing seasons at different times of the year and in slightly different ways, recording unique parts of the seasonal flow. The model overlaps the tree-ring chronologies and combines annual streamflow information and climate data to arrive at a monthly streamflow estimate.

“Now we can get down into a monthly scale and pick up seasonal patterns within the streamflow,” said Stagge. “It’s the seasonality that determines drought, how reservoirs fill, and when there are shortages. Now that we have this method, we can start looking at what major droughts over the past 600 years would mean for today’s water supply.”

The study was co-authored by R. Justin DeRose of the U.S. Forest Service and Tammy Rittenour of the Department of Geology at Utah State University.

Media Library: http://bit.ly/2CWgq8R

Media Contacts: James Stagge: 203-939-2323, james.stagge@usu.edu | Utah Water Research Lab, Utah State University
David Rosenberg: 435-797-8689, david.rosenberg@usu.edu | Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering, Utah State University
Matt Jensen: Public Relations Specialist, USU College of Engineering | matthew.jensen@usu.edu office: 435-797-8170 | cell: 801-362-0830 | @EngineeringUSU | engineering.usu.edu

USU hydrologists used tree-ring chronologies to develop a computer model that estimates monthly streamflow records dating back to the 1400s.

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