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Field work will see UNBC researchers study storm impact on Nechako River watershed

To study impacts of the Pineapple Express storms on the Nechako River watershed, UNBC researchers will be doing fieldwork for the next two months.
UNBC prof Stephen Dery web
Environmental Science Professor Dr. Stephen Déry is leading a multi-year project on the sustainability of the Nechako Watershed.

To study impacts of the Pineapple Express storms on the Nechako River watershed, UNBC researchers will be doing fieldwork for the next two months.

The Tahtsa Ranges Atmospheric Rivers Experiment (TRARE) is one component of the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)/Rio Tinto Industrial Research Chair in Climate Change and Water Security project led by environmental science Professor Dr. Stephen Déry.

The intensive field campaign’s goal is to explore how much and what type of precipitation the storms bring to the region. The experiment is the first of its kind in Canada and will help inform understanding of how climate change may affect the hydrology of the Nechako River Watershed.

Pineapple Express storms are the colloquial name for atmospheric rivers that originate in the Pacific Ocean near Hawaii and transport high volumes of moisture northwards.

“While these storms often replenish critical water resources, the adverse, and often violent, conditions that accompany them such as flooding, washouts and landslides can damage infrastructure and endanger the health and well-being of ecosystems and communities,” Déry said. “With climate change, it is anticipated these ‘rivers in the sky’ will become more frequent and intense along B.C.’s coast. It is therefore critical to understand their nature and impacts including within the Nechako Watershed.”

A team of UNBC and Université du Québec à Montréal (UQAM) researchers will travel to three remote sites about 100 kilometres south of Houston, B.C., including the Mount Sweeney weather station, Huckleberry Mine, and the Nadina River spawning channel.

The team, which includes a rotation of UNBC graduate students and others, will use state-of-the-art-meteorological equipment. They will install weather stations at the main sites, rain gauges along the slopes of Mount Sweeney, equipment to measure the volume of water in Lake Sweeney and the Tahtsa Narrows as well as the volume of water going through streams in the area. During storms, research staff will launch weather balloons to profile air temperatures, humidity and winds.

The team is working with volunteers from the Cheslatta Carrier Nation to install an array of standard gauges to collect additional precipitation data within the First Nation’s traditional territory.

“The remote reaches of the upper Nechako Watershed lack critical infrastructure like weather radar to monitor atmospheric conditions. During TRARE, we will measure precipitation at nearly 20 sites to capture precise information on the spatio-temporal variability of rainfall associated with Pineapple Expresses and other storms,” Déry explained. “This is particularly important in assessing water inflows to the Nechako Reservoir and for planning of Rio Tinto’s hydropower operations at the Kemano Powerhouse.”

The NSERC/Rio Tinto Industrial Research Chair is a five-year multifaceted research project examining the hydrology of the Nechako River Watershed. The project is now in its third year and the research team publishes regular newsletter updates on their fieldwork. This is the latest installment https://web.unbc.ca/~sdery/datafiles/IRCNewsletter_Vol3_Issue2.pdf.

“The extensive monitoring network of water temperature loggers, precipitation gauges and weather stations combined with computer modeling are providing insights on the causes for the Nechako’s rapidly changing environment,” Déry said. “Our partnership with Rio Tinto has facilitated research across the vast Nechako Watershed to the benefit of their operations, in addition to various stakeholders and communities across the basin.”