When good signatures go bad: Applying hydrologic signatures in large sample studies

Author:

McMillan Hilary1ORCID,Coxon Gemma2ORCID,Araki Ryoko1ORCID,Salwey Saskia2ORCID,Kelleher Christa3ORCID,Zheng Yanchen2ORCID,Knoben Wouter4ORCID,Gnann Sebastian5ORCID,Seibert Jan6ORCID,Bolotin Lauren1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Geography San Diego State University San Diego California USA

2. School of Geographical Sciences University of Bristol Bristol UK

3. Civil and Environmental Engineering Lafayette College Easton Pennsylvania USA

4. Centre for Hydrology University of Saskatchewan Canmore Alberta Canada

5. Institute of Environmental Science and Geography University of Potsdam Potsdam Germany

6. Department of Geography University of Zurich Zurich Switzerland

Abstract

AbstractHydrologic signatures are quantitative metrics that describe streamflow statistics and dynamics. Signatures have many applications, including assessing habitat suitability and hydrologic alteration, calibrating and evaluating hydrologic models, defining similarity between watersheds and investigating watershed processes. Increasingly, signatures are being used in large sample studies to guide flow management and modelling at continental scales. Using signatures in studies involving 1000s of watersheds brings new challenges as it becomes impractical to examine signature parameters and behaviour in each watershed. For example, we might wish to check that signatures describing flood event characteristics have correctly identified event periods, that signature values have not been biassed by data errors, or that human and natural influences on signature values have been correctly interpreted. In this commentary, we draw from our collective experience to present case studies where naïve application of signatures fails to correctly identify streamflow dynamics. These include unusual precipitation or flow regimes, data quality issues, and signature use in human‐influenced watersheds. We conclude by providing guidance and recommendations on applying signatures in large sample studies.

Funder

Division of Earth Sciences

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Water Science and Technology

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