An extended time-varying Budyko framework for quantifying the hydrological effect of vegetation restoration under climate variations at watershed scale

被引:1
|
作者
Zhang, Yifan [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Pang, Jianzhuang [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Xu, Hang [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Leng, Manman [4 ]
Zhang, Zhiqiang [1 ,2 ,3 ,5 ]
机构
[1] Beijing Forestry Univ, Jixian Natl Forest Ecosyst Observat & Res Stn, CNERN, Beijing 100083, Peoples R China
[2] Beijing Forestry Univ, Coll Soil & Water Conservat, Natl Key Lab High Efficiency Forest Prod, Beijing 100083, Peoples R China
[3] State Forestry & Grassland Adm, Key Lab Soil & Water Conservat & Desertificat Comb, Beijing 100083, Peoples R China
[4] Jining Water Conservancy Dev Ctr, Jining 272000, Peoples R China
[5] Beijing Forestry Univ, Coll Soil & Water Conservat, Beijing 100083, Peoples R China
关键词
Precipitation regime; Vegetation restoration; Climatic dryness; Budyko framework; Decomposition method; LAND-USE CHANGE; MIYUN RESERVOIR; LOESS PLATEAU; RIVER-BASIN; RUNOFF; VARIABILITY; STREAMFLOW; CATCHMENT; IMPACT; SOIL;
D O I
10.1016/j.envres.2024.118730
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
The Budyko framework, widely used to quantify the watershed hydrological response to the watershed characteristics and climate variabilities, is continuously refined to overcome the disadvantages of steady state assumption. However, dynamic variations in vegetations and climate variables are not fully integrated including coverages and precipitation regimes of intensity, frequency, and duration. To address this, we developed an innovative approach for determining the parameter omega in the Budyko framework to quantify the hydrological effects of vegetation restoration in a mesoscale watershed located in northern China. We found that fractional vegetation coverage (FVC), heavy precipitation amount (95pTOT), and the number of precipitation days (R01mm) are significant variables for estimating omega to improve the predictive capability of the watershed response. This extended time-varying Budyko framework can rigorously capture the temporal variations and underlying mechanisms of interactions between vegetation dynamic and precipitation regime partitioning precipitation (P) to R. Under the Budyko-Fu framework, compared to constant omega ((omega) over bar) or omega that only considers FVC (omega(P)) or precipitation regimes (omega(FVC)) for simulating R, using omega that integrated FVC and precipitation regimes (omega(P-FVC)) can improve Nash-Sutcliffe efficiency coefficient (NSE) by 24.81%, while reduced the root mean squared error (RMSE) and relative error (RE) by 64.08% and 65.77%, respectively. Although the increase in climatic dryness (PET/P) resulted in decreased R, the increase in FVC has also a significant contribution to this decrease due to vegetation restoration. We highlight that decrease precipitation intensity (95pTOT) and frequency (R01mm) amplified the hydrological effects of vegetation restoration, causing a 79.09 similar to 100.31% increase in R compared to the independent impact of changes in FVC. We conclude that the extended time-varying Budyko framework by precipitation regime is more rigorous for quantifying the hydrological effects of ecological restoration under climate change and providing more reliable approach for adaptive watershed management.
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页数:13
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