1. Introduction
Climate change has become an important factor in water management and planning [
1]. Its impact on water resources must therefore be studied along regional and national policies. Numerous studies already assessed this impact on various hydrological components of the hydrologic cycle. In Europe, for instance, several reports [
2,
3] attest lesser water volumes in rivers; a conclusion notably shared by the IPCC AR5 report [
1,
4]. The documented trend was found unequally distributed over the year: volumes are increasing in winter but not to the point of compensating for a general diminution the rest of the year [
5]. The general hydrological regime of rivers is thus evolving [
6,
7], including a change in frequency and magnitude of extreme events. Still, discharge is not the only component of the water cycle to be impacted by climate change. The cryosphere, which locally dictates streamflow [
8], is declining in volume and extent across the European continent. For example, a lost from 4 to 10 cm of snowfall per decade have been identified over the last century [
9,
10,
11]. Groundwaters are impacted as well but, in this instance, it is particularly difficult to separate the role of climate change from other anthropogenic interferences [
12,
13,
14]. Their recharge is nonetheless expected to decrease over Europe, with the exception of a short winter period in the northern parts of the continent [
15]. Evapotranspiration processes are also altered [
16,
17,
18,
19,
20], leading to changes in the soil water content [
21,
22]. All these processes being intertwined, it appears obvious that any modification on one component could be transmitted to the others. For instance, the evolution of the soil water content is strongly linked to changes in evapotranspiration [
20] and groundwater recharge that in turn modulates discharge intensities [
23].
Most of the above studies focused on a single component of the hydrological cycle. Falkenmark, et al. [
24,
25] pointed out the weaknesses of such a siloed approach and recommended encompassing all hydrologic components at once. They suggest moving from a focus on surface water and aquifer (blue water) to a broader focus that would encompass also evapotranspiration or soil moisture (green water) [
26]. This consideration is yet unaddressed in most hydrological studies. For instance, in a recent article about climate water scarcity, Mekonnen, et al. [
27] held forth on the limit of strictly considering blue water. A spatio-temporal assessment exploring the co-evolution of all major components of the hydrological cycle is deemed preferable. Of course, some published works did examine blue and green waters (e.g., Zang, et al. [
28], Zang, et al. [
29], Gosain, et al. [
30], Faramarzi, et al. [
31], Abbaspour, et al. [
32], Schuol, et al. [
33], Schuol, et al. [
34]) but mostly as non-interacting categories. Zuo, et al. [
35] went further than most and simulated the spatiotemporal variability of green and blue waters at regional scale. They concluded on the dissimilar evolution of both types of water, identifying a need for differentiated management practices. Climate change remained however unaddressed in their analysis. In short, many advocate exploring the coevolution of all major components of the water cycle (and their different water paths) but such endeavor is still rarely conducted.
This study has for objective to propose a methodology for an integrated analysis of the coevolution of all major components of the hydrological cycle under climate change. The innovative approach developed in this paper considered past and future climates, covering a 100-year period. The use of those two datasets to feed the agro-hydrological model SWAT over one of the major watershed of France (the Garonne river watershed) has led to the simulation of those major hydrological components. This double approach has allowed to interpret projected futures impacts on water resources regarding changes that have already occurred during the last 50 years.
4. Discussion
The performance metrics calculated after the setup of the SWAT model in calibration and validation has confirmed that the present SWAT implementation is functional for long-term hydro-climatic assessment. Only three stations (Foix, Saint-Béat, and Roquefort) located in higher altitudes present slightly lower scores, but the presence of a complex snow dynamics in the upstream watersheds complicates modelling, as detailed in Grusson, et al. [
52], is largely responsible for this discrepancy. Yet SWAT has difficulties in capturing the low flow regime at few locations (lower NSElog values) where some dam operations influence river discharges, namely because of the absence of information on their management strategies. Similar findings were reported by Sauquet, et al. [
38] and Hendrickx, et al. [
39] who conclude that the impact of existing structures on the discharge quickly diminish beyond the Pyreneans slopes. The models capture well the high discharge and the global volume of water at a monthly time step but face some difficulties to perform during low flow event. The challenge of this study to assess different hydrological component lies in the fact that SWAT is calibrated only with discharge values, since no data were available with a sufficient temporal and spatial resolution for others hydrological component. However, the calibration at a subwatershed scale (each gauging station used to calibrated upstream subwatershed with a dedicated set of parameters) try to handle this problematic by producing a context specific calibration adapted to local hydrological conditions [
68,
69]. If calibration was not possible to perform for other outputs than discharge, the reliability of the simulated water cycle have been validated using different sources. The balance of simulated hydrological component was positively validated [
70] against the physically-based surface hydrological chain of models from Météo-France [
71,
72]. In mountainous sections, the simulation of snowpack has been compared with punctual data and remote sensing images [
52]. In those subwatersheds, runoff is more important, unless the presence of snow during winter increases infiltration and subsurface flows and decreases the direct surface runoff [
52]. In addition, tests have been conducted on the same SWAT set-up following the differential split sampling test procedure proposed by Klemeš [
73] in order to assess its robustness to climate or land uses changes(presented in Grusson, et al. [
74]).
A validation step of the different climate models against observed data has been conducted in this study over the historical period. This step appears primordial to the authors in order to evaluate the possible bias in the representation of regional climate and is yet rarely presented in climate impact assessment. In this study, analysis confirmed that the climatic ensemble was producing a fair representation of the regional climate. The most notable bias is found in very extreme part of the distribution of precipitation (first and last decile). The climate ensemble seems to produce over- and underestimated extremes. This is a known bias of EURO-CORDEX climate models, given the complexity of capturing extreme events [
75,
76]. On the other hand, this assessment also shown that the SWAT was reacting satisfactorily when inputted with climate data.
Once the modeling chain was deemed suitable to simulate the regional hydrological cycle including if based on climate data projection, several hydrological components have been analyzed over two periods: historical (1962–2010) and future (2010–2050). The choice has been made to present the result focusing on two seasons because of their regional dissimilarity in term of temperature and precipitation [
47,
77]. The winter snow dynamics in the hydrology of the watershed [
36,
78] has also been a criteria to consider the output seasonally. The overall analysis of the different hydrological component shows that when the climate ensemble was producing a homogenous and significant trend for the projected period, the same trend were also always visible in the simulations from observed data over the historical period. This consistency points out a steady evolution of the system, and the trends observed during the last 50 years can be expected to persist in the future. The RCP 4.5 scenario and the RCP 8.5 scenario have shown to produce very similar trends for each of the hydrological component. This is consistent with a deeper analysis of both scenario on regional climate projection visible in [
79]. Simulated trends appear to be far more influenced by the seasonality than by RCP scenarios.
During winter, mountainous subwatersheds in the Pyrenees are facing a different evolution than the rest of the catchment. They are the only areas where discharge increases from 10 to 20%, in tune with previous studies [
10,
38,
80,
81]. It seems to be mostly due to a lower water storage in snowpack as also reported by López-Moreno [
82] and Maris, et al. [
83]. The effect of snowpack diminution from 20% to 50% and higher liquid precipitation lead to an increase of runoff volume (+10%), a lower infiltration (−20% to −50%) and lower soil water content (−5% to −10%), which is consistent with the study presented in Grusson, et al. [
52]. It should be stressed that the increase of liquid precipitation and the diminution of solid precipitation in altitude during winter is also consistent with previous analyses of the EURO-CORDEX ensemble over France, as reported by Ouzeau, et al. [
84] (see also IPCC [
85] Annex 1). In those watersheds, the evapotranspiration is increasing during winter, consistently with the rise of temperature and the decreasing of soil water. For the same season, all blue water fluxes in the remaining part of the watershed (hillslope and plain) have been impacted by a general contraction during the historical period. This negative trend does not however appear very significant over the upcoming decades and seems to indicate a stability or a slower decrease. Trends observed from the analysis of the green water components are on the other hand much more significant with a future winter decrease of soil water content and an increase of evapotranspiration, in accordance with the decrease of precipitation and the general increase of temperature.
Precipitation and temperature trends are similar over summer for the historical and projected period, with an increase of temperature and a decrease of precipitation even more significant than for the winter season. The historical period is impacted by a significant diminution of discharge within the catchment (−10 to −30%), with exception of some rare subwatershed in the plain where precipitation increase slightly. This trend is projected to remain the same in the 30 next years and this general contraction of summer discharge volume is consistent with previous study such as Caballero, et al. [
81] and Tisseuil, et al. [
80]. Others blue water components have also been facing a general decrease over the watershed in the past and projection shown a continuation of this tendency. In the plain, this decline remains limited in volume e.g., runoff with a decrease of about less than 2 mm between 1962–1972 and 2000–2010. Only the discharge seems to be facing a more substantial decrease. The only increase is simulated for few watersheds of the Pyrenean zone, where the model produces an increase of infiltration.
As for winter, a highly significant decline of soil water content impacts the entire watershed during summer, for both historical and projected period. Decreasing of soil water content can reaches 50% in the downstream part of the catchment which is coherent with the literature at the national scale [
86,
87]. One would thus expect evapotranspiration fluxes to increase, following the increase of temperature, which would stress soil water content. If this is true on mountains and hillsides which seems to be in accordance with the increase of infiltration, in the valley, the evapotranspiration appears to decrease substantially (from −5% to −15%). This decrease indicates periods for which evapotranspiratory demand cannot be met due to a lower soil water availability. The projected evolution is also quite in line with the recent past: the summer soil water content decreases, restricting evapotranspiration, as also reported by Jung, et al. [
20] at a global scale. The direct impact of climate change on soil water, evapotranspiration and discharge during summer in southern Europe during the last 50 years is also coherent with Orth, et al. [
88].
Projections presented in this study corroborate the evolution reported over the historical period, since most trends are in the same direction. The most notable divergence between recent past and future periods, is the unclear trend for some of surface blue water during winter (runoff and infiltration) when the trend over the historical period is significant. It is also noteworthy that some of those blue water fluxes in few mountainous watersheds are not affected by the same general decreasing trend (e.g., subsurface flow in summer and infiltration in winter). Those hydrological behaviors are not easy to explained, but it must be notice that (i) those subwatersheds were the more complicated to calibrated due to their complex hydrological functioning, and (ii) the analysis presented here report only the total monthly volume and the model setup deployed does not allow to determine if variations originate from an evenly distributed increase or from an increase of extreme event which frequency are also suspected to be modified by climate change [
6].
5. Conclusions
An integrated approach to assess the impact of climate change on the water cycle at a regional scale has been put together. It aimed understanding variations in the many components of the hydrological cycle as well as their interconnections, considering the hydrological system as a whole. It offers a guideline to conduct a regional impact assessment, and can be adapted to different hydrological models. The following steps and conclusions are drawn:
The SWAT model was successfully calibrated over a 10-year period (and validated over 40 years) in a step-wise fashion, from the upper part of the watershed to its lower part, using 21 gauging stations in order to encompass local topography and land use and soil diversity. The model was also deemed competent under non-stationary climate, capable of extending the analysis using projected time series issued by a number of GCM/RCM pairs.
An evaluation has been conducted to evaluate the representation of our regional climate offered by the climate ensemble and its influence on the calibration of our hydrological model. Data from climate models were compared with the SAFRAN product over the historical period and the discharge simulated through the SWAT model on the same period compared to observations. A fair representation of the regional climate and the discharge have been shown, allowing us to extend our analysis to future climate.
Many components of the Garonne hydro-system (discharge, snowpack, runoff, infiltration, subsurface flow, evapotranspiration, and soil water content) were identified and analyzed for winter and summer. Changes into the hydrological cycle are assessed by comparing the trend and the geographic spread of variations over the last 50 years with the tendency projected by climate model for the next 30 years. Future trends mostly turned out in the same direction than past ones, suggesting a continuous perturbation of the hydrological system. Future trends are found more divergent between seasons than between the two projected scenarios (RCP 4.5 RCP 8.5). If we look the watershed globally and for both seasons, blue water fluxes are expected to decrease over the watershed, with a more significant trend for summer than winter. Discharge is the blue water fluxes which have been and are expected to be further impacted by the strongest decreasing trend. Similarly, the soil water is facing a significant decreasing trend through the entire reported period, while the evapotranspiratory demand is found increasing. Two important seasonal dissimilarities within the hydrological behaviors of the watershed have been highlighted. In winter, discharge increase in higher grounds because of lower snowpack associated to an increase of surface runoff for some subwatershed. During the same period, soil water content is decreasing, but can still support the evapotranspiratory demand, leading to an actual increase of evapotranspiration. In summer, however, the decrease of blue water fluxes is more comprehensive, and the soil water content level in the plain does not allow the evapotranspiratory demand to be met, and the evapotranspiration is actually decreasing. Only a few subwatersheds in the mountainous area can respond to this demand generated by an increase of temperature, and support an increasing evapotranspiration.
Further analysis at shorter temporal scales could offer more information of the repartition of those fluxes over time, regarding the occurrence of extreme precipitation events.