Hydrological records can be used to reconstruct the resilience of watersheds to climatic extremes

Date

2024

Director

Publisher

Nature Research
Acceso abierto / Sarbide irekia
Artículo / Artikulua
Versión publicada / Argitaratu den bertsioa

Project identifier

  • MINECO//CGL2015-64284-C2-1-R/ES/ recolecta
Impacto

Abstract

Hydrologic resilience modeling is used in public watershed management to assess watershed ability to supply life-supporting ecoservices under extreme climatic and environmental conditions. Literature surveys criticize resilience models for failing to capture watershed dynamics and undergo adequate testing. Both shortcomings compromise their ability to provide management options reliably protecting water security under real-world conditions. We formulate an empirical protocol to establish real-world correspondence. The protocol applies empirical nonlinear dynamics to reconstruct hydrologic dynamics from watershed records, and analyze the response of reconstructed dynamics to extreme regional climatic conditions. We devise an AI-based early-warning system to forecast (out-of-sample) reconstructed hydrologic resilience dynamics. Application to the La Tejería (Spain) experimental watershed finds it to be a low dimensional nonlinear deterministic dynamic system responding to internal stressors by irregularly oscillating along a watershed attractor. Reconstructed and forecasted hydrologic resilience behavior faithfully captures monthly wet-cold/dry-warm weather patterns characterizing the Mediterranean region.

Description

Keywords

Watershed management, Climatic extremes, Hydrologic resilience modeling

Department

Institute on Innovation and Sustainable Development in Food Chain - ISFOOD

Faculty/School

Degree

Doctorate program

item.page.cita

Huffaker, R., Campo-Bescós, M. Á., Luquin, E., Casalí Sarasibar, J., Muñoz-Carpena, R. (2024) Hydrological records can be used to reconstruct the resilience of watersheds to climatic extremes. Communications Earth and Environment, 5(19), 1-13. https://doi.org/10.1038/s43247-023-01181-x.

item.page.rights

© 2024, The Author(s). This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

Licencia

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