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Evaluating the Ubiquity of Thresholds in Rainfall‐Runoff Response Across Contrasting Environments

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Type de ressource
Article de revue
Auteurs/contributeurs
  • Ross, Cody A. (Auteur)
  • Ali, Geneviève A. (Auteur)
  • Spence, Christopher (Auteur)
  • Courchesne, François (Auteur)
Titre
Evaluating the Ubiquity of Thresholds in Rainfall‐Runoff Response Across Contrasting Environments
Résumé
Abstract Thresholds in precipitation‐runoff relationships have been observed in numerous studies using scatter plots comparing meteorological factors and hydrologic response metrics. Most thresholds reported in the literature have been identified from relationships between meteorological factors that quantify volumes or depths of water (e.g., total event rainfall) and metrics capturing hydrologic response magnitude (e.g., runoff ratio), with a strong emphasis on hillslopes and catchments in temperate humid environments. Knowledge gaps, however, remain regarding the ubiquity of hydrologic thresholds across different climatic environments and different meteorological factors that affect different response metrics. This study therefore aimed to evaluate relationships for a wide range of meteorological factors and response metrics derived from event‐scale rainfall‐runoff analysis for 21 sites spanning seven contrasting geographic areas. Specifically, meteorological factors quantifying rainfall depth, rainfall intensity, and hydrologic abstractions related to evapotranspiration were considered, along with response metrics that describe response timing and response magnitude, leading to 4,557 relationships being evaluated. While rainfall depth thresholds were observed for most sites, rainfall intensity thresholds were also observed. Additionally, threshold behavior was shown to be sensitive to antecedent conditions over specific durations of time preceding a rainfall‐runoff event. The large number of relationships evaluated in this study allowed for the development of a typology of threshold dynamics and the formulation of hypotheses about dominant hydrological processes. This typology may not only promote standardized threshold descriptions but also make intersite comparisons of nonlinear rainfall‐runoff behavior easier. , Key Points While water volume thresholds dominate the literature, rainfall intensity thresholds were observed even at sites with humid climates Threshold behavior is sensitive to antecedent conditions over specific durations of time preceding a rainfall‐runoff event A newly proposed typology of threshold dynamics may be used toward standardized threshold descriptions and intersite comparisons
Publication
Water Resources Research
Volume
57
Numéro
1
Date
01/2021
Abrév. de revue
Water Resources Research
Langue
en
DOI
10.1029/2020WR027498
ISSN
0043-1397, 1944-7973
URL
https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1029/2020WR027498
Consulté le
2024-05-25 23 h 35
Catalogue de bibl.
DOI.org (Crossref)
Référence
Ross, C. A., Ali, G. A., Spence, C., & Courchesne, F. (2021). Evaluating the Ubiquity of Thresholds in Rainfall‐Runoff Response Across Contrasting Environments. Water Resources Research, 57(1). https://doi.org/10.1029/2020WR027498
Secteurs et disciplines
  • Nature et Technologie
Lien vers cette notice
https://bibliographies.uqam.ca/riisq/bibliographie/ZQIHMDMU
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