Dynamics of the flood response to slow-fast landscape-climate feedbacks
The dynamical evolution of the flood response to landscape-climate feedbacks is evaluated in a joint nonlinear statistical-dynamical approach. For that purpose, a spatiotemporal sensitivity analysis is conducted on hydrological data from 1976–2008 over 804 catchments throughout Austria, and a gen...
Main Authors: | , |
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Copernicus Publications
2015-06-01
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Series: | Proceedings of the International Association of Hydrological Sciences |
Online Access: | https://www.proc-iahs.net/370/125/2015/piahs-370-125-2015.pdf |
Summary: | The dynamical evolution of the flood response to landscape-climate feedbacks
is evaluated in a joint nonlinear statistical-dynamical approach. For that
purpose, a spatiotemporal sensitivity analysis is conducted on hydrological
data from 1976–2008 over 804 catchments throughout Austria, and a general,
data-independent nonlinear dynamical model is built linking floods with
climate (via precipitation), landscape (via elevation) and their feedbacks.
These involve nonlinear scale interactions, with landform evolution
processes taking place at the millennial scale (slow dynamics), and climate
adjusting in years to decades (fast dynamics). The results show that floods
are more responsive to spatial (regional) than to temporal (decadal)
variability. Catchments from dry lowlands and high wetlands exhibit
similarity between the spatial and temporal sensitivities (spatiotemporal
symmetry) and low landscape-climate codependence, suggesting they are not
coevolving significantly. However, intermediate regions show differences
between those sensitivities (symmetry breaks) and higher landscape-climate
codependence, suggesting undergoing coevolution. The break of symmetry is an
emergent behaviour from nonlinear feedbacks within the system. A new
coevolution index is introduced relating spatiotemporal symmetry with
relative characteristic celerities, which need to be taken into account in
hydrological space-time trading. Coevolution is expressed here by the
interplay between slow and fast dynamics, represented respectively by
spatial and temporal characteristics. The dynamical model captures emerging
features of the flood dynamics and nonlinear landscape-climate feedbacks,
supporting the nonlinear statistical assessment of spatiotemporally
asymmetric flood change. Moreover, it enables the dynamical estimation of
flood changes in space and time from the given knowledge at different
spatiotemporal conditions. This study ultimately brings to light emerging
signatures of change in floods arising from nonlinear slow-fast feedbacks in
the landscape-climate dynamics, and contributes towards a better
understanding of spatiotemporal flood changes and underlying nonlinearly
interacting drivers. |
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ISSN: | 2199-8981 2199-899X |