Towards repeatable catchment experiments
Abstract
Wider research context: The rainfall-runoff process is of high interest in catchment hydrology as it directly impacts the quantity and quality of available freshwater. It is influenced by a complex interplay of hydrometeorological variables and catchment properties that complicates the isolation of the effect of individual variables. This calls for new conceptual frameworks that advance our understanding of hydrological processes at the catchment scale. Objectives: The main aim is to better characterize the influence of hydrometeorological variables on runoff generation and catchment-wide water transport by utilizing naturally reoccurring patterns in hydrological flux and state variables as repeated experiments. Approach: First we will define hydrologically similar rainfall and catchment wetness (soil water content and groundwater) patterns by a data-driven and a modeling approach. Rainfall and catchment wetness will be defined as hydrologically similar if their respective runoff reactions are similar as measured by objective functions. Second, water transit time measures (transit time distribution (TTD), fraction of young water (Fyw)) will be defined as similar if a) for TTD their respective simulated isotope tracer in runoff or b) for Fyw the sine waves fitted to the isotope tracer in runoff are similar. Once identified, the hydrologically similar patterns will be searched in real-world data of three study catchments (forest, grassland, agriculture) and the respective runoff reactions will be analyzed. A similarity in the runoff reaction indicates repeatability of rainfall-runoff processes under similar conditions (repeatable experiment) while different runoff responses for similar patterns will be explained by hydrometeorological variables to characterize their influence on the rainfall-runoff process. Additional hydrological modeling will give further insights into catchment-internal reasons for similar or different runoff reactions and enables generalization of results for other catchments Innovation: Repeated catchment experiments in the field are currently impossible due to financial, administrative, and technological constraints. This study circumvents the problem by utilizing naturally reoccurring patterns in hydrologic time series and uses them as repeated experiments to advance our understanding of the rainfall-runoff process. The main outcome of this project will be an advanced understanding of the influence of hydrometeorological variables on the runoff process which can be further used to investigate the rainfall-runoff processes of other catchments. The proposed method can be transferred to other catchments in different climatic regions, has the potential to estimate transit times without long tracer time series and can be used to design measurement networks. Primary researchers involved: Dr. Michael Stockinger, Univ.-Prof. Dr. Christine Stumpp
Project staff
Michael Stockinger
Dipl.-Ing. Dr. Michael Stockinger
michael_stockinger@boku.ac.at
Tel: +43 1 47654-81516
Project Leader
01.10.2021 - 30.09.2025
Adriane Hövel
Adriane Hövel M.Sc.
adriane.hoevel@boku.ac.at
Tel: +43 1 47654-81554
Project Staff
01.10.2021 - 30.06.2025
Christine Stumpp
Univ.Prof. Dr. Christine Stumpp
christine.stumpp@boku.ac.at
Tel: +43 1 47654-81511
Project Staff
01.10.2021 - 30.09.2025
Hatice Türk
Hatice Türk MSc
hatice.tuerk@boku.ac.at
Tel: +43 1 47654-81554
Project Staff
01.10.2021 - 30.06.2025