Abstract
The baffling diversity of runoff generation processes, alongside
our sketchy understanding of how physiographic characteristics control
fundamental hydrological functions of water collection, storage, and release,
continue to pose major research challenges in catchment hydrology. Here, we
propose innovative data-driven diagnostic signatures for overcoming the
prevailing status quo in catchment inter-comparison. More specifically, we
present dimensionless double mass curves (dDMC) which allow inference of
information on runoff generation and the water balance at the seasonal and
annual timescales. By separating the vegetation and winter periods, dDMC
furthermore provide information on the role of biotic and abiotic controls in
seasonal runoff formation.
A key aspect we address in this paper is the derivation of dimensionless
expressions of fluxes which ensure the comparability of the signatures in
space and time. We achieve this by using the limiting factors of a
hydrological process as a scaling reference. We show that different
references result in different diagnostics. As such we define two kinds of
dDMC which allow us to derive seasonal runoff coefficients and to
characterize dimensionless streamflow release as a function of the potential
renewal rate of the soil storage. We expect these signatures for storage
controlled seasonal runoff formation to remain invariant, as long as the
ratios of release over supply and supply over storage capacity develop
similarly in different catchments.
We test the proposed methods by applying them to an operational data set
comprising 22 catchments (12–166 km2) from different environments in
southern Germany and hydrometeorological data from 4 hydrological years. The
diagnostics are used to compare the sites and to reveal the dominant controls
on runoff formation.
The key findings are that dDMC are meaningful signatures for catchment runoff
formation at the seasonal to annual scale and that the type of scaling
strongly influences the diagnostic potential of the dDMC. Adding
discrimination between growing season and winter period was of fundamental
importance and easy to implement by means of a temperature-index model. More
specifically, temperature aggregates explain over 70 % of the variability
of the seasonal summer runoff coefficients. The results also show that the
soil topographic index, i.e. the product of topographic gradient and
saturated hydraulic conductivity, is significantly correlated with winter
runoff coefficients, whereas the topographic gradient and the hydraulic
conductivity alone are not. We conclude that proxies for gradients and
resistances should be interpreted as a pair. Lastly, the dDMC concept reveals
memory effects between summer and winter runoff regimes that are not relevant
in spring between the transition from winter to summer.
Citation
ID:
232781
Ref Key:
seibert2017hydrologyunravelling