The Music of Rivers: The Mathematics of Waves Reveals Global Structure and Drivers of Streamflow Regime

Author:

Brown Brian C.12ORCID,Fullerton Aimee H.3,Kopp Darin4ORCID,Tromboni Flavia56,Shogren Arial J.78,Webb J. Angus9ORCID,Ruffing Claire10,Heaton Matthew11,Kuglerová Lenka12ORCID,Allen Daniel C.13,McGill Lillian14,Zarnetske Jay P.15ORCID,Whiles Matt R.16,Jones Jeremy B.17ORCID,Abbott Benjamin W.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Plant and Wildlife Sciences Brigham Young University Provo UT USA

2. Department of Computer Science Brigham Young University Provo UT USA

3. Fish Ecology Division Northwest Fisheries Science Center National Marine Fisheries Service National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Seattle WA USA

4. Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education (ORISE) Corvallis OR USA

5. Rheinland‐PfälzischeTechnische Universität Kaiserslautern Landau Landau Germany

6. Leibniz Institute of Freshwater Ecology and Inland Fisheries Berlin Germany

7. Earth and Environmental Sciences Department Michigan State University East Lansing MI USA

8. Department of Biological Sciences University of Alabama Tuscaloosa AL USA

9. Water, Environment and Agriculture Program Department of Infrastructure Engineering The University of Melbourne Parkville VIC Australia

10. The Nature Conservancy in Oregon Portland OR USA

11. Department of Statistics Brigham Young University Provo UT USA

12. Department of Forest Ecology and Management Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences Umeå Sweden

13. Department of Ecosystem Science and Management Penn State University Park PA USA

14. Center for Quantitative Science University of Washington Seattle WA USA

15. Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences Michigan State University East Lansing MI USA

16. Soil and Water Sciences Department University of Florida Gainesville FL USA

17. Institute for Arctic Biology University of Alaska Fairbanks Fairbanks AK USA

Abstract

AbstractRiver flows change on timescales ranging from minutes to millennia. These vibrations in flow are tuned by diverse factors globally, for example, by dams suppressing multi‐day variability or vegetation attenuating flood peaks in some ecosystems. The relative importance of the physical, biological, and human factors influencing flow is an active area of research, as is the related question of finding a common language for describing overall flow regime. Here, we addressed both topics using a daily river discharge data set for over 3,000 stations across the globe from 1988 to 2016. We first studied similarities between common flow regime quantification methods, including traditional flow metrics, wavelets, and Fourier analysis. Across all these methods, the flow data showed low‐dimensional structure (i.e., simple and consistent patterns), suggesting that fundamental mechanisms are constraining flow regime. One such pattern was that day‐to‐day variability was negatively correlated with year‐to‐year variability. Additionally, the low‐dimensional structure in river flow data correlated closely with only a small number of catchment characteristics, including catchment area, precipitation, and temperature—but notably not biome, dam surface area, or number of dams. We discuss these findings in a framework intended to be accessible to the many communities engaged in river research and management, while stressing the importance of letting structure in data guide both mechanistic inference and interdisciplinary discussion.

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

Water Science and Technology

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