Identifying threshold responses of Australian dryland rivers to future hydroclimatic change

Abstract Rivers provide crucial ecosystem services in water-stressed drylands. Australian dryland rivers are geomorphologically diverse, ranging from through-going, single channels to discontinuous, multi-channelled systems, yet we have limited understanding of their sensitivity to future hydroclima...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Z. T. Larkin, T. J. Ralph, S. Tooth, K. A. Fryirs, A. J. R. Carthey
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2020-04-01
Series:Scientific Reports
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-63622-3
id doaj-02d43724ba1a4c128778b979fd39bcd6
record_format Article
spelling doaj-02d43724ba1a4c128778b979fd39bcd62021-04-25T11:39:11ZengNature Publishing GroupScientific Reports2045-23222020-04-0110111510.1038/s41598-020-63622-3Identifying threshold responses of Australian dryland rivers to future hydroclimatic changeZ. T. Larkin0T. J. Ralph1S. Tooth2K. A. Fryirs3A. J. R. Carthey4Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Macquarie UniversityDepartment of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Macquarie UniversityDepartment of Geography and Earth Sciences, Aberystwyth UniversityDepartment of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Macquarie UniversityDepartment of Biological Sciences, Macquarie UniversityAbstract Rivers provide crucial ecosystem services in water-stressed drylands. Australian dryland rivers are geomorphologically diverse, ranging from through-going, single channels to discontinuous, multi-channelled systems, yet we have limited understanding of their sensitivity to future hydroclimatic changes. Here, we characterise for the first time the geomorphology of 29 dryland rivers with catchments across a humid to arid gradient covering >1,800,000 km2 of continental eastern and central Australia. Statistical separation of five specific dominantly alluvial river types and quantification of their present-day catchment hydroclimates enables identification of potential thresholds of change. Projected aridity increases across eastern Australia by 2070 (RCP4.5) will result in ~80% of the dryland rivers crossing a threshold from one type to another, manifesting in major geomorphological changes. Dramatic cases will see currently through-going rivers (e.g. Murrumbidgee, Macintyre) experience step changes towards greater discontinuity, characterised by pronounced downstream declines in channel size and local termination. Expanding our approach to include other river styles (e.g. mixed bedrock-alluvial) would allow similar analyses of dryland rivers globally where hydroclimate is an important driver of change. Early identification of dryland river responses to future hydroclimatic change has far-reaching implications for the ~2 billion people that live in drylands and rely on riverine ecosystem services.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-63622-3
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Z. T. Larkin
T. J. Ralph
S. Tooth
K. A. Fryirs
A. J. R. Carthey
spellingShingle Z. T. Larkin
T. J. Ralph
S. Tooth
K. A. Fryirs
A. J. R. Carthey
Identifying threshold responses of Australian dryland rivers to future hydroclimatic change
Scientific Reports
author_facet Z. T. Larkin
T. J. Ralph
S. Tooth
K. A. Fryirs
A. J. R. Carthey
author_sort Z. T. Larkin
title Identifying threshold responses of Australian dryland rivers to future hydroclimatic change
title_short Identifying threshold responses of Australian dryland rivers to future hydroclimatic change
title_full Identifying threshold responses of Australian dryland rivers to future hydroclimatic change
title_fullStr Identifying threshold responses of Australian dryland rivers to future hydroclimatic change
title_full_unstemmed Identifying threshold responses of Australian dryland rivers to future hydroclimatic change
title_sort identifying threshold responses of australian dryland rivers to future hydroclimatic change
publisher Nature Publishing Group
series Scientific Reports
issn 2045-2322
publishDate 2020-04-01
description Abstract Rivers provide crucial ecosystem services in water-stressed drylands. Australian dryland rivers are geomorphologically diverse, ranging from through-going, single channels to discontinuous, multi-channelled systems, yet we have limited understanding of their sensitivity to future hydroclimatic changes. Here, we characterise for the first time the geomorphology of 29 dryland rivers with catchments across a humid to arid gradient covering >1,800,000 km2 of continental eastern and central Australia. Statistical separation of five specific dominantly alluvial river types and quantification of their present-day catchment hydroclimates enables identification of potential thresholds of change. Projected aridity increases across eastern Australia by 2070 (RCP4.5) will result in ~80% of the dryland rivers crossing a threshold from one type to another, manifesting in major geomorphological changes. Dramatic cases will see currently through-going rivers (e.g. Murrumbidgee, Macintyre) experience step changes towards greater discontinuity, characterised by pronounced downstream declines in channel size and local termination. Expanding our approach to include other river styles (e.g. mixed bedrock-alluvial) would allow similar analyses of dryland rivers globally where hydroclimate is an important driver of change. Early identification of dryland river responses to future hydroclimatic change has far-reaching implications for the ~2 billion people that live in drylands and rely on riverine ecosystem services.
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-63622-3
work_keys_str_mv AT ztlarkin identifyingthresholdresponsesofaustraliandrylandriverstofuturehydroclimaticchange
AT tjralph identifyingthresholdresponsesofaustraliandrylandriverstofuturehydroclimaticchange
AT stooth identifyingthresholdresponsesofaustraliandrylandriverstofuturehydroclimaticchange
AT kafryirs identifyingthresholdresponsesofaustraliandrylandriverstofuturehydroclimaticchange
AT ajrcarthey identifyingthresholdresponsesofaustraliandrylandriverstofuturehydroclimaticchange
_version_ 1721509420326715392