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Featured researches published by Alvaro Ayala.


Water Resources Research | 2014

Altitudinal gradients, midwinter melt, and wind effects on snow accumulation in semiarid midlatitude Andes under La Niña conditions

Alvaro Ayala; James McPhee; Ximena Vargas

The Andes Cordillera remains a sparsely monitored and studied snow hydrology environment in comparison to similar mountain ranges in the Northern Hemisphere. In order to uncover some of the key processes driving snow water equivalent (SWE) spatial variability, we present and analyze a distributed SWE data set, sampled at the end of accumulation season 2011. Three representative catchments across the region were monitored, obtaining measurements in an elevation range spanning 2000 to 3900 m asl and from 32.4° to 34.0°S in latitude. Climatic conditions during this season corresponded to a moderate La Nina phenomenon, which is generally correlated with lower-than normal accumulation. Collected measurements can be described at the regional and watershed extents by altitudinal gradients that imply an increase by a factor of two in snow depth between 2200 and 3000 m asl, though with significant variability at the upper sites. In these upper sites, we found north-facing, wind-sheltered slopes showing 25% less average SWE values than south-facing, wind-exposed ones. This suggests that under these conditions, solar radiation dominated wind transport effects in controlling end-of-winter variability. Nevertheless, we found clusters of snow depth measurements above 3000 m asl that can be explained by wind exposure differences. This is the first documented snow depth data set of this spatial extent for this region, and it is framed within an ongoing research effort aimed at improving understanding and modeling of snow hydrology in the extratropical Andes Cordillera.


Water Resources Research | 2017

Patterns of glacier ablation across North-Central Chile: Identifying the limits of empirical melt models under sublimation-favorable conditions

Alvaro Ayala; Francesca Pellicciotti; Shelley MacDonell; James McPhee; Paolo Burlando

We investigate the energy balance and ablation regimes of glaciers in high-elevation, dry environments using glaciometeorological data collected on six glaciers in the semiarid Andes of North-Central Chile (29–34°S, 3127–5324 m). We use a point-scale physically based energy balance (EB) model and an enhanced Temperature-Index (ETI) model that calculates melt rates only as a function of air temperature and net shortwave radiation. At all sites, the largest energy inputs are net shortwave and incoming longwave radiation, which are controlled by surface albedo and elevation, respectively. Turbulent fluxes cancel each other out at the lower sites, but as elevation increases, cold, dry and wind-exposed conditions increase the magnitude of negative latent heat fluxes, associated with large surface sublimation rates. In midsummer (January), ablation rates vary from 67.9 mm w.e. d−1 at the lowest site (∼100% corresponding to melt), to 2.3 mm w.e. d−1 at the highest site (>85% corresponding to surface sublimation). At low-elevation, low-albedo, melt-dominated sites, the ETI model correctly reproduces melt using a large range of possible parameters, but both the performance and parameter transferability decrease with elevation for two main reasons: (i) the air temperature threshold approach for melt onset does not capture the diurnal variability of melt in cold and strong irradiated environments and (ii) energy losses decrease the correlation between melt and net shortwave radiation. We summarize our results by means of an elevation profile of ablation components that can be used as reference in future studies of glacier ablation in the semiarid Andes.


Journal of Glaciology | 2015

Satellite observations show no net change in the percentage of supraglacial debris-covered area in northern Pakistan from 1977 to 2014

Sam Herreid; Francesca Pellicciotti; Alvaro Ayala; Anna Chesnokova; Christian Kienholz; Joseph M. Shea; Arun B. Shrestha


Hydrological Processes | 2016

Modelling the hydrological response of debris-free and debris-covered glaciers to present climatic conditions in the semiarid Andes of central Chile†

Alvaro Ayala; Francesca Pellicciotti; Shelley MacDonell; James McPhee; Sebastián Vivero; Cristian Campos; Pascal Egli


Innovations in Watershed Management under Land Use and Climate Change. Proceedings of the 2010 Watershed Management Conference, Madison, Wisconsin, USA, 23-27 August 2010 | 2010

An approach to estimating hydropower impacts of climate change from a regional perspective.

James McPhee; Eduardo Rubio-Alvarez; Rodrigo Meza; Alvaro Ayala; Ximena Vargas; Sebastian Vicuna


Journal of Glaciology | 2017

Centreline and cross-glacier air temperature variability on an Alpine glacier: assessing temperature distribution methods and their influence on melt model calculations

Thomas Shaw; Benjamin Brock; Alvaro Ayala; Nick Rutter; Francesca Pellicciotti


Hydrology and Earth System Sciences Discussions | 2018

The CAMELS-CL dataset: catchment attributes and meteorology forlarge sample studies – Chile dataset

Camila Alvarez-Garreton; Pablo Mendoza; Juan Pablo Boisier; Nans Addor; Mauricio Galleguillos; Mauricio Zambrano-Bigiarini; Antonio Lara; Cristóbal Puelma; Gonzalo Cortés; René D. Garreaud; James McPhee; Alvaro Ayala


Water Resources Research | 2017

Patterns of glacier ablation across North-Central Chile: Identifying the limits of empirical melt models under sublimation-favorable conditions: GLACIER ABLATION IN THE SEMIARID ANDES

Alvaro Ayala; Francesca Pellicciotti; Shelley MacDonell; James McPhee; P. Burlando


Journal of Glaciology | 2017

Melt and surface sublimation across a glacier in a dry environment: distributed energy-balance modelling of Juncal Norte Glacier, Chile

Alvaro Ayala; Francesca Pellicciotti; Nadav Peleg; Paolo Burlando


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2015

Modeling 2 m air temperatures over mountain glaciers: Exploring the influence of katabatic cooling and external warming: Air temperature over mountain glaciers

Alvaro Ayala; Francesca Pellicciotti; Joseph M. Shea

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Joseph M. Shea

University of Saskatchewan

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Sebastian Vicuna

Pontifical Catholic University of Chile

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