Streamflow stationarity in a changing world

Author:

Yang YutingORCID,Roderick Michael L,Yang Dawen,Wang Zhengrong,Ruan Fangzheng,McVicar Tim R,Zhang Shulei,Beck Hylke E

Abstract

Abstract Whether river flows remain stationary is of great concern to hydrologists, water engineers, and society in general, yet is subject to substantial debate. Here we provide the first comprehensive assessment of the long-term stationarity of annual streamflow for 11 069 catchments globally. Our observation-based evidence shows that the long-term annual streamflow remains stationary in 79% of catchments with minimal human disturbance, indicating that historical climate change alone has not led to non-stationarity in annual streamflow series in most catchments. In direct contrast, we found streamflow has remained stationary in only 38% of those catchments where substantial human interventions have occurred. These results demonstrate the scale of the human impact on the freshwater system, and highlight the ongoing need for dealing with the impacts of direct human interventions to ensure successful water management into the future.

Funder

Australian Research Council

Ministry of Science and Technology of China

National Nature Science Foundatio of China

QingHai Department of Science and Technology

Publisher

IOP Publishing

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,General Environmental Science,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment

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