Controls From Above or Below? The Influence of Entangled Climate and
Land Characteristics on Hydrological Dynamics in Headwater Catchments
Abstract
Abstract Although the importance of dynamic water storage and
flowpath partitioning on discharge behavior has been well recognized
within the critical zone community, there is still little consensus
surrounding the question, “ How do climate factors from above and
land characteristics from below dictate dynamic storage, flowpath
partitioning, and ultimately regulate hydrological dynamics?” Answers
to this question have been hindered by limited and inconsistent
spatio-temporal data and arduous-to-measure subsurface data. Here we aim
to answer this question above by using a semi-distributed hydrological
model (HBV model) to simulate and understand the dynamics of water
storage, groundwater flowpaths, and discharge in 15 headwater catchments
across the contiguous United States. Results show that topography,
precipitation falling as snow, and catchment soil texture all influence
catchment dynamic storage, storage-discharge sensitivity, flowpath
partitioning, and discharge flashiness. Flat, rain-dominated sites
(< 30% precipitation as snow) with finer soils exhibited
flashier discharge regimes than catchments with coarse soils and/or
significant snowfall (>30% precipitation as snow).
Rain-dominated sites with clay soils (indicative of chemical weathering)
showed lower dynamic storage and discharge that was more sensitive to
changes in dynamic storage than rainy sites with coarse soils. Steep,
snowy sites with coarse soils (more mechanical weathering) had lowest
dynamic storage and deep groundwater fed discharge that was less
sensitive to changes in dynamic storage than fine-soil snowy or rainy
catchments. These results highlight aridity and precipitation (snow
versus rain) as the dominant climate controls from above and topography
and soil texture as the dominant land controls from below. The study
challenges the traditional view that climate controls water balance
while subsurface structure dictates subsurface flow path. Rather, it
shows that climate and land characteristics jointly regulate water
balance, groundwater flowpath partitioning, and discharge responses.
These findings have important implication for the projection of the
future of water resources, especially as climate change and human
activities continue to intensify.