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Water risk management has been adversely affected by climate variations, including recent climate change. Climate variations have highly impacted the hydrological cycles in the atmosphere and biosphere, and their impact can be defined with the teleconnection between climate signals and hydrological variables. Water managers should practice future risk management to mitigate risks, including the impact of teleconnection, and stochastically simulated scenarios can be employed as an effective tool to take advantage of water management preparation. A stochastic simulation model for hydrological variables teleconnected with climate signals is very useful for water managers. Therefore, the objective of the current study was to develop a novel stochastic simulation model for the simulation of synthetic series teleconnected with climate signals. By jointly decomposing the hydrological variables and a climate signal with bivariate empirical mode decomposition (BEMD), the bivariate nonstationary oscillation resampling (B-NSOR) model was applied to the significant components. The remaining components were simulated with the newly developed method of climate signal-led K-nearest neighbor-based local linear regression (CKLR). This entire approach is referred to as the climate signal-led hydrologic stochastic simulation (CSHS) model. The key statistics were estimated from the 200 simulated series and compared with the observed data, and the results showed that the CSHS model could reproduce the key statistics including extremes while the SML model showed slight underestimation in the skewness and maximum values. Additionally, the observed long-term variability of hydrological variables was reproduced well with the CSHS model by analyzing drought statistics. Moreover, the Hurst coefficient with slightly higher than 0.8 was fairly preserved by the CSHS model while the SML model is underestimated as 0.75. The overall results demonstrate that the proposed CSHS model outperformed the existing shifting mean level (SML) model, which has been used to simulate hydroclimatological variables. Future projections until 2100 were obtained with the CSHS model. The overall results indicated that the proposed CSHS model could represent a reasonable alternative to teleconnect climate signals with hydrological variables.
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Abstract This study investigates possible trends and teleconnections in temperature extremes in New South Wales (NSW), Australia. Daily maximum and minimum temperature data covering the period 1971–2021 at 26 stations located in NSW were used. Three indices, which focus on daily maximum temperature, daily minimum temperature, and average daily temperature in terms of Excessive Heat Factor (EHF) were investigated to identify the occurrence of heatwaves (HWs). The study considered HWs of different durations (1-, 5-, and 10-days) in relation to intensity, frequency, duration, and their first occurrence parameters. Finally, the influences of three global climate drivers, namely – the El Niño/Southern Oscillation (ENSO), the Southern Annular Mode (SAM), and the Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD) were investigated with associated heatwave attributes for extended Austral summers. In this study, an increasing trend in both hot days and nights was observed for most of the selected stations within the study area. The increase was more pronounced for the last decade (2011–2021) of the investigated time period. The number, duration and frequency of the heatwaves increased over time considering the EHF criterion, whereas no particular trend was detected in cases of TX90 and TN90. It was also evident that the first occurrence of all the HWs shifted towards the onset of the extended summer while considering the EHF criterion of HWs. The correlations between heatwave attributes and climate drivers depicted that heatwave over NSW was positively influenced by both the IOD and ENSO and negatively correlated with SAM. The findings of this study will be useful in formulating strategies for managing the impacts of extreme temperature events such as bushfires, floods, droughts to the most at-risk regions within NSW.
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The agriculture sector is profoundly impacted by the abiotic stresses in arid or semi-arid regions that experience extreme weather patterns related to temperature (T), precipitation (P), humidity (H), and other factors. This study adopts a flexible approach that incorporates the D-vine copula density to analyze trivariate (and bivariate) joint and conditional hazard risk. The methodology was applied to a case study in the Ait Ben Yacoub region of Morocco. Monthly series for T, H, and P were modeled using the Weibull-2P and Weibull-3P models, selected based on fitness statistics. The survival BB8 copula was best described as joint dependence for pair T–P, rotated BB8 270 degrees copula for T–H, while rotated Joe 270 degrees copula for P–H. The analysis of joint probability stress focused on both primary joint scenarios (for OR and AND-hazard conditions) and conditional return periods (RPs) for trivariate and bivariate case. Lower univariate RPs resulted in higher marginal quantiles for T and lower for H and P events. Lower trivariate (and bivariate) AND-joint RPs (or higher concurrence probabilities) were associated with higher T with lower P and H quantiles. The occurrence of trivariate (and bivariate) events was less frequent in the AND-joint case compared to the OR-joint case. The conditional joint RP of T (or T with P, or T with H) was significantly affected by different P (at 10th and 25th percentile) and H (at 5th and 25th percentile) (or P, or H) conditions. Lower conditional RPs of T (or T with H, or T with P) had resulted at given low P and H (or low P, or low H levels). In conclusion, the estimated risk statistics are vital for the study region, highlighting the need for effective adaptation and resilience planning in agriculture crop management.
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Abstract The estimation of sea levels corresponding to high return periods is crucial for coastal planning and for the design of coastal defenses. This paper deals with the use of historical observations, that is, events that occurred before the beginning of the systematic tide gauge recordings, to improve the estimation of design sea levels. Most of the recent publications dealing with statistical analyses applied to sea levels suggest that astronomical high tide levels and skew surges should be analyzed and modeled separately. Historical samples generally consist of observed record sea levels. Some extreme historical skew surges can easily remain unnoticed if they occur at low or moderate astronomical high tides and do not generate extreme sea levels. The exhaustiveness of historical skew surge series, which is an essential criterion for an unbiased statistical inference, can therefore not be guaranteed. This study proposes a model combining, in a single Bayesian inference procedure, information of two different natures for the calibration of the statistical distribution of skew surges: measured skew surges for the systematic period and extreme sea levels for the historical period. A data‐based comparison of the proposed model with previously published approaches is presented based on a large number of Monte Carlo simulations. The proposed model is applied to four locations on the French Atlantic and Channel coasts. Results indicate that the proposed model is more reliable and accurate than previously proposed methods that aim at the integration of historical records in coastal sea level or surge statistical analyses. , Plain Language Summary Coastal facilities must be designed as to be protected from extreme sea levels. Sea levels at high tide are the combination of astronomical high tides, which can be predicted, and skew surges. The estimation of the statistical distribution of skew surges is usually based on the skew surges measured by tide gauges and can be improved with the use of historical information, observations that occurred before the beginning of the tide gauge recordings. Extreme skew surges combined with low or moderate astronomical high tides would not necessarily generate extreme sea levels, and consequently some extreme historical skew surges could be missed. The exhaustiveness of historical information is an essential criterion for an unbiased estimation, but it cannot be guaranteed in the case of historical skew surges. The present study proposes to combine skew surges for the recent period and extreme sea levels for the historical period. The proposed model is compared to previously published approaches and appears to be more reliable and accurate. The proposed model is applied to four case studies on the French Atlantic and Channel coasts. , Key Points The exhaustiveness of historical sea record information is demonstrated based on French Atlantic coast data A comparative analysis of approaches to integrate historical information is carried out The efficiency of a new method for the combination of systematic skew surges and historical records is verified
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Quantile estimates are generally interpreted in association with the return period concept in practical engineering. To do so with the peaks‐over‐threshold (POT) approach, combined Poisson‐generalized Pareto distributions (referred to as PD‐GPD model) must be considered. In this article, we evaluate the incorporation of non‐stationarity in the generalized Pareto distribution (GPD) and the Poisson distribution (PD) using, respectively, the smoothing‐based B‐spline functions and the logarithmic link function. Two models are proposed, a stationary PD combined to a non‐stationary GPD (referred to as PD0‐GPD1) and a combined non‐stationary PD and GPD (referred to as PD1‐GPD1). The teleconnections between hydro‐climatological variables and a number of large‐scale climate patterns allow using these climate indices as covariates in the development of non‐stationary extreme value models. The case study is made with daily precipitation amount time series from southeastern Canada and two climatic covariates, the Arctic Oscillation (AO) and the Pacific North American (PNA) indices. A comparison of PD0‐GPD1 and PD1‐GPD1 models showed that the incorporation of non‐stationarity in both POT models instead of solely in the GPD has an effect on the estimated quantiles. The use of the B‐spline function as link function between the GPD parameters and the considered climatic covariates provided flexible non‐stationary PD‐GPD models. Indeed, linear and nonlinear conditional quantiles are observed at various stations in the case study, opening an interesting perspective for further research on the physical mechanism behind these simple and complex interactions.
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Abstract Change point detection methods have an important role in many hydrological and hydraulic studies of river basins. These methods are very useful to characterize changes in hydrological regimes and can, therefore, lead to better understanding changes in extreme flows behavior. Flood events are generally characterized by a finite number of characteristics that may not include the entire information available in a discharge time series. The aim of the current work is to present a new approach to detect changes in flood events based on a functional data analysis framework. The use of the functional approach allows taking into account the whole information contained in the discharge time series of flood events. The presented methodology is illustrated on a flood analysis case study, from the province of Quebec, Canada. Obtained results using the proposed approach are consistent with those obtained using a traditional change point method, and demonstrate the capability of the functional framework to simultaneously consider several flood features and, therefore, presenting a comprehensive way for a better exploitation of the information contained in a discharge time series.