Skip to main content
Journal cover image

Comparative study of ecohydrological streamflow probability distributions

Publication ,  Journal Article
Ceola, S; Botter, G; Bertuzzo, E; Porporato, A; Rodriguez-Iturbe, I; Rinaldo, A
Published in: Water Resources Research
September 17, 2010

We run a comparative study of ecohydrological models of streamflow probability distributions (pdfs), p(Q), derived by Botter et al. (2007a, 2009), against field data gathered in different hydrological contexts. Streamflows measured in several catchments across various climatic regions of northeastern Italy and the United States are employed. The relevance of the work stems from the implied analytical predictive ability of hydrologic variability, whose role on stream and riparian ecological processes and large-scale management schemes is fundamental. The tools employed are analytical models of p(Q) (and of the related flow duration curve, D(Q)) derived by coupling suitable storage-discharge relations with a stochastic description of streamflow production through soil moisture dynamics, and are expressed as a function of few macroscopic rainfall, soil, vegetation and geomorphological parameters. In this work we compare the performances of a recent version of the model (which includes the effects of nonlinear subsurface storage-discharge relations) to those provided by the linear version through the application of the models to 13 test catchments belonging to various climatic and geomorphic contexts. A general agreement between predicted and observed daily streamflows pdfs is shown, though differences emerge between the linear and the nonlinear approaches. In particular, by including the effects of a nonlinear storage-discharge relation the model accuracy is shown to increase with respect to the linear scheme in most examined cases. We show that this is not simply attributable to the added parameter but corresponds to a proper likelihood increase. The nonlinear model is shown to exhibit three basic forms for p(Q) (monotonically decreasing with an atom of probability in Q = 0, bell-shaped with the mode close to zero, bell-shaped with the mode close to the mean), corresponding to different hydrologic regimes which are clearly detectable in field data. Inferences on the nonlinear character of the relation between subsurface storage and discharge from observed p(Q) are finally drawn. Copyright 2010 by the American Geophysical Union.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Water Resources Research

DOI

ISSN

0043-1397

Publication Date

September 17, 2010

Volume

46

Issue

9

Related Subject Headings

  • Environmental Engineering
  • 4011 Environmental engineering
  • 4005 Civil engineering
  • 3707 Hydrology
  • 0907 Environmental Engineering
  • 0905 Civil Engineering
  • 0406 Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Ceola, S., Botter, G., Bertuzzo, E., Porporato, A., Rodriguez-Iturbe, I., & Rinaldo, A. (2010). Comparative study of ecohydrological streamflow probability distributions. Water Resources Research, 46(9). https://doi.org/10.1029/2010WR009102
Ceola, S., G. Botter, E. Bertuzzo, A. Porporato, I. Rodriguez-Iturbe, and A. Rinaldo. “Comparative study of ecohydrological streamflow probability distributions.” Water Resources Research 46, no. 9 (September 17, 2010). https://doi.org/10.1029/2010WR009102.
Ceola S, Botter G, Bertuzzo E, Porporato A, Rodriguez-Iturbe I, Rinaldo A. Comparative study of ecohydrological streamflow probability distributions. Water Resources Research. 2010 Sep 17;46(9).
Ceola, S., et al. “Comparative study of ecohydrological streamflow probability distributions.” Water Resources Research, vol. 46, no. 9, Sept. 2010. Scopus, doi:10.1029/2010WR009102.
Ceola S, Botter G, Bertuzzo E, Porporato A, Rodriguez-Iturbe I, Rinaldo A. Comparative study of ecohydrological streamflow probability distributions. Water Resources Research. 2010 Sep 17;46(9).
Journal cover image

Published In

Water Resources Research

DOI

ISSN

0043-1397

Publication Date

September 17, 2010

Volume

46

Issue

9

Related Subject Headings

  • Environmental Engineering
  • 4011 Environmental engineering
  • 4005 Civil engineering
  • 3707 Hydrology
  • 0907 Environmental Engineering
  • 0905 Civil Engineering
  • 0406 Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience