4.0 Article

Visualising and quantifying the variability hydrological of state in intermittent rivers

Journal

FUNDAMENTAL AND APPLIED LIMNOLOGY
Volume 193, Issue 1, Pages 21-38

Publisher

E SCHWEIZERBARTSCHE VERLAGSBUCHHANDLUNG
DOI: 10.1127/fal/2019/1149

Keywords

ephemeral streams; temporary streams; ponding; pools; aquatic state; network contraction

Funding

  1. Natural Environment Research Council [NE/L01016X/1]
  2. European COST Action [CA15113]
  3. Environment Agency
  4. Natural Environment Research Council [NE/L01016X/2, NE/L01016X/1] Funding Source: researchfish
  5. NERC [NE/L01016X/1, NE/L01016X/2] Funding Source: UKRI

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The hydrology of intermittent rivers has been characterised using either flow regimes, with limited spatial resolution, or network contraction, with limited temporal resolution. Exploration of the dynamic behaviour of these rivers, on which highly diverse biological communities depend, requires longitudinal, year-round observations with a more detailed classification of hydrological state than can be provided by gauging stations or wet/dry mapping alone. Observations of dry, ponded, moderate lbw and high flow hydrological states spanning 20 years with approximately monthly frequency along ten chalk rivers in the south-east of England were visualised. There was slower transitioning between hydrological states and less spatial fragmentation on rivers with groundwater-dominated regimes than on those more influenced by superficial deposits. Seasonal patterns in both the composition and configuration of states were demonstrated using adapted landscape metrics. Responses to hydrological extremes and anthropogenic influences included drying downstream of the source and an artificially near-perennial reach. A framework is proposed for the categorisation of metrics of hydrological state and demonstrates that the classification and dimensional limitations of traditional approaches cannot fully characterise the hydrological behaviour of intermittent rivers. Such characterisation is an important step towards the tailored assessments required for effective management of these dynamic systems.

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