4.6 Article

Detecting the Dominant Cause of Streamflow Decline in the Loess Plateau of China Based onthe Latest Budyko Equation

Journal

WATER
Volume 10, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/w10091277

Keywords

Loess Plateau; streamflow change; Budyko framework; climate change; human activities

Funding

  1. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2017YFC0405900]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51709221]
  3. Planning Project of Science and Technology of Water Resources of Shaanxi [2015slkj-27, 2017slkj-19]
  4. China Scholarship Council [201608610170]
  5. Open Research Fund of State Key Laboratory of Simulation and Regulation ofWater Cycle in River Basin (China Institute ofWater Resources and Hydropower Research) [IWHR-SKL-KF201803]
  6. Doctorate Innovation Funding of Xi'an University of Technology [310-252071712]

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Quantifying the relative contributions of climate variability and human activity to streamflow change is important for effective water resource use and management. Four sub-catchments of the Wei River Basin (WRB) in the Loess Plateau in China were selected as the study region, where the evolution of parameter from the latest Budyko equation (Wang-Tang equation) was explored using an 11-year moving window. The elasticity of streamflow was derived from the climatic aridity index, represented by the ratio of annual potential evaporation (EPto annual precipitation (The effects of climate change and human activities on streamflow change during 1971-2010 were quantified with climate elasticity and decomposition methods. The contributions of different types of human activities to streamflow were further empirically determined using the water and soil conservation method. Results indicate that (1) under the same climate condition (Pand EP), a higher value of caused an increase in evaporation rate (E/P) and a decrease in runoff. Changes in these hydrological variables led to a subsequent reduction in streamflow in the WRB; (2) The absolute value of the precipitation elasticity was larger than the potential evaporation elasticity, indicating that streamflow change was more sensitive to precipitation; (3) The results based on the two methods were consistent. Climate change and human activities contributed to the decrease in streamflow by 29% and 71%, respectively, suggesting that human activities have exerted more profound impacts on streamflow in the study region; (4) Contributions of different water and soil conservation measures to streamflow reduction were calculated and sorted in descending order: Irrigation, industrial and domestic consumption, terrace, afforestation, reservoirs, check-dams, then grass-planting.

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