Journal ArticleDOI
Climatic and Landscape Controls on Long-Term Baseflow
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This article is published in Water Resources Research.The article was published on 2021-06-01. It has received 17 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Baseflow & Aridity index.read more
Citations
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Catchment Coevolution: A Useful Framework for Improving Predictions of Hydrological Change?
Tirthankar Roy,T. Lahmers,Antonio Alves Meira Neto,Rajarshi Mukherjee,Jonas Wied Pedersen,Rodrigo Valdés-Pineda,T. Yoshida,Peter Troch +7 more
TL;DR: The concept of catchment coevolution has been explored in the literature as mentioned in this paper, with the goal of predicting the hydrologic response of catchments to changes in geology, climate, and tectonics.
Journal ArticleDOI
Understanding event runoff coefficient variability across Australia using the hydroEvents R package
Conrad Wasko,Danlu Guo +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors compare different methods of extracting and pairing hydrologic events focussing on the relationship between rainfall and runoff, and demonstrate the value of automated event extraction and pairing algorithms for large-sample hydrology analysis by calculating event runoff coefficients.
Climate controls how ecosystems size the root zone storage capacity at catchment scale
Hongkai Gao,Markus Hrachowitz,Stanislaus J. Schymanski,Fabrizio Fenicia,Fabrizio Fenicia,Nutchanart Sriwongsitanon,Hubert H. G. Savenije,Hubert H. G. Savenije +7 more
TL;DR: The root zone moisture storage capacity of terrestrial ecosystems is a buffer providing vegetation continuous access to water and a critical factor controlling land-atmospheric moisture exchange, hydrological response, and biogeochemical processes.
Journal ArticleDOI
How is Baseflow Index (BFI) impacted by water resource management practices
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the relationship between BFI and two sets of covariates (natural covariates only and a combined set of natural and water resource management covariates) using the CAMELS-GB large-sample hydrology dataset.
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The Impact of an Open Water Balance Assumption on Understanding the Factors Controlling the Long‐Term Streamflow Components
TL;DR: In this article , the authors analyzed the long-term streamflow components and their behavior under an open water balance assumption, using observed data of 734 Brazilian catchments with diverse hydroclimatic conditions.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI
The Natural Flow Regime
N. LeRoy Poff,N. LeRoy Poff,J. David Allan,Mark B. Bain,James R. Karr,Karen L. Prestegaard,Brian Richter,Richard E. Sparks,Julie C. Stromberg +8 more
TL;DR: In this article, Naiman et al. pointed out that harnessing of streams and rivers comes at great cost: Many rivers no longer support socially valued native species or sustain healthy ecosystems that provide important goods and services.
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A simple hydrologically based model of land surface water and energy fluxes for general circulation models
TL;DR: In this paper, a generalization of the single soil layer variable infiltration capacity (VIC) land surface hydrological model previously implemented in the Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory (GFDL) general circulation model (GCM) is described.
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Effective and efficient global optimization for conceptual rainfall‐runoff models
TL;DR: In this article, a shuffled complex evolution (SCE-UA) method was proposed to solve the multiple optima problem for the conceptual rainfall runoff (CRR) model SIXPAR.
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Response of mean annual evapotranspiration to vegetation changes at catchment scale
TL;DR: In this article, a simple two-parameter model was developed that relates mean annual evapotranspiration to rainfall, potential evapOTranspiration, and plant-available water capacity.