Using hydrological and climatic catchment clusters to explore drivers of catchment behavior

被引:57
|
作者
Jehn, Florian U. [1 ]
Bestian, Konrad [1 ]
Breuer, Lutz [1 ,2 ]
Kraft, Philipp [1 ]
Houska, Tobias [1 ]
机构
[1] Justus Liebig Univ Giessen, Inst Landscape Ecol & Resources Management ILR, Res Ctr BioSyst Land Use & Nutr iFZ, Heinrich Buff Ring 26, D-35390 Giessen, Germany
[2] Justus Liebig Univ Giessen, Ctr Int Dev & Environm Res ZEU, Senckenbergstr 3, D-35392 Giessen, Germany
关键词
FLOW DURATION CURVES; REGIONAL PATTERNS; PHYSICAL CONTROLS; LARGE-SAMPLE; CLASSIFICATION; SEASONALITY; VARIABILITY; METEOROLOGY; ATTRIBUTES; SIMILARITY;
D O I
10.5194/hess-24-1081-2020
中图分类号
P [天文学、地球科学];
学科分类号
07 ;
摘要
The behavior of every catchment is unique. Still, we seek for ways to classify them as this helps to improve hydrological theories. In this study, we use hydrological signatures that were recently identified as those with the highest spatial predictability to cluster 643 catchments from the CAMELS dataset. We describe the resulting clusters concerning their behavior, location and attributes. We then analyze the connections between the resulting clusters and the catchment attributes and relate this to the co-variability of the catchment attributes in the eastern and western US. To explore whether the observed differences result from clustering catchments by either climate or hydrological behavior, we compare the hydrological clusters to climatic ones. We find that for the overall dataset climate is the most important factor for the hydrological behavior. However, depending on the location, either aridity, snow or seasonality has the largest influence. The clusters derived from the hydrological signatures partly follow ecoregions in the US and can be grouped into four main behavior trends. In addition, the clusters show consistent low flow behavior, even though the hydrological signatures used describe high and mean flows only. We can also show that most of the catchments in the CAMELS dataset have a low range of hydrological behaviors, while some more extreme catchments deviate from that trend. In the comparison of climatic and hydrological clusters, we see that the widely used Koppen-Geiger climate classification is not suitable to find hydrologically similar catchments. However, in comparison with novel, hydrologically based continuous climate classifications, some clusters follow the climate classification very directly, while others do not. From those results, we conclude that the signal of the climatic forcing can be found more explicitly in the behavior of some catchments than in others. It remains unclear if this is caused by a higher intra-catchment variability of the climate or a higher influence of other catchment attributes, overlaying the climate signal. Our findings suggest that very different sets of catchment attributes and climate can cause very similar hydrological behavior of catchments - a sort of equifinality of the catchment response.
引用
收藏
页码:1081 / 1100
页数:20
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] History and perspectives of hydrological catchment modelling
    Todini, E.
    HYDROLOGY RESEARCH, 2011, 42 (2-3): : 73 - 85
  • [22] Assessment of future climate change impacts on hydrological behavior of Richmond River Catchment
    Hashim Isam Jameel Al-Safi
    Priyantha Ranjan Sarukkalige
    WaterScienceandEngineering, 2017, 10 (03) : 197 - 208
  • [23] Using legitimacy dialogues to explore responses to flooding issues in a UK catchment
    Gearey, Mary
    Jeffrey, Paul
    WATER AND ENVIRONMENT JOURNAL, 2010, 24 (04) : 320 - 327
  • [24] Identifying control factors of hydrological behavior through catchment classification in Mainland of China
    Xu, Huan
    Wang, Hao
    Liu, Pan
    JOURNAL OF HYDROLOGY, 2024, 645
  • [25] Catchment characteristics dominate the hydrological behavior of closed lakes across the Tibetan Plateau
    Hou, Minglei
    Wei, Jiahua
    Shi, Yang
    Ayantobo, Olusola O.
    Hou, Shengling
    CATENA, 2024, 242
  • [26] Development of a Hydrological Model Using Observed Data for the Marina Catchment of Singapore
    Sun, Yabin
    Wendi, Dadiyorto
    Doan, Chi Dung
    Anh Tuan Dao
    Liu, Jiandong
    Parasuraman, Suresh Babu
    Oliver, Julien Jean-Marie
    Liong, Shie-Yui
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE 35TH IAHR WORLD CONGRESS, VOLS III AND IV, 2013,
  • [27] The effects of bushfires on hydrological processes using a paired-catchment analysis
    S. Liu
    L. M. Leslie
    M. Speer
    R. Bunker
    X. Mo
    Meteorology and Atmospheric Physics, 2004, 86 : 31 - 44
  • [28] Prediction limits of a catchment hydrological model using different estimates of ETp
    Vazquez, R. F.
    Hampel, H.
    JOURNAL OF HYDROLOGY, 2014, 513 : 216 - 228
  • [29] Refining understanding of hydrological connectivity in a boreal catchment
    Spence, Christopher
    Phillips, Ross W.
    HYDROLOGICAL PROCESSES, 2015, 29 (16) : 3491 - 3503
  • [30] Hydrological simulation of the international catchment of Guadiana River
    Brandao, C
    Rodrigues, R
    PHYSICS AND CHEMISTRY OF THE EARTH PART B-HYDROLOGY OCEANS AND ATMOSPHERE, 2000, 25 (03): : 329 - 339