Separating climate change and human activities' effects on flow regime with hydrological model error correction

Climate change and human activities have markedly altered flow regimes, leading to deleterious consequences for riverine ecosystems. The widely employed hydrological modeling restoration method for conducting flow regime attribution often tends to underemphasize the impact of simulation errors on at...

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Main Authors: Qin Wang, Yong Liu, Yintang Wang, Ye Zhang, Lingjie Li, Leizhi Wang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2023-12-01
Series:Ecological Indicators
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1470160X23014073
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author Qin Wang
Yong Liu
Yintang Wang
Ye Zhang
Lingjie Li
Leizhi Wang
author_facet Qin Wang
Yong Liu
Yintang Wang
Ye Zhang
Lingjie Li
Leizhi Wang
author_sort Qin Wang
collection DOAJ
description Climate change and human activities have markedly altered flow regimes, leading to deleterious consequences for riverine ecosystems. The widely employed hydrological modeling restoration method for conducting flow regime attribution often tends to underemphasize the impact of simulation errors on attribution outcomes. Moreover, the issue of ambiguous attribution targets in flow regime attribution remains a critical concern. This study presented a flow regime attribution framework integrated the hydrological model error correction. Indicators of hydrologic alteration (IHA) simulated by the XAJ and GR4J hydrological models and corrected using the quantile-mapping (QM) and convolutional neural network-long short term memory (CNN-LSTM) error correction methods, were employed to create 6 scenarios for assessing the impacts of climate change and human activities on flow regime changes. A case study was conducted in the Xitiaoxi basin, located in the upper reaches of Lake Tai in China. The results demonstrated that CNN-LSTM's superior performance over QM in correcting IHA metrics simulated by both XAJ and GR4J. The mean flow regime attribution results obtained from XAJ and GR4J simulations following the application of CNN-LSTM correction, mitigated the underestimation of contributions from the primary driving factors, in contrast to uncorrected or QM-corrected IHA metrics attribution results. Additionally, the regime attribution findings revealed all 33 IHA metrics experienced changes, with 73 % of them attributing human activities as the predominant driving forces. Substantial variations in IHA metrics exerted a certain degree of pressure on riverine habitats, particularly impacting the spawning and reproductive activities of piscine species.
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spelling doaj.art-f1d2cb0a451c46a4ac0fdb677360ed152023-12-03T05:40:09ZengElsevierEcological Indicators1470-160X2023-12-01157111265Separating climate change and human activities' effects on flow regime with hydrological model error correctionQin Wang0Yong Liu1Yintang Wang2Ye Zhang3Lingjie Li4Leizhi Wang5School of Civil Engineering, Tianjin University, Tianjin 300350, China; The National Key Laboratory of Water Disater Prevention, Nanjing Hydraulic Research Institute, Nanjing, Jiangsu 210029, ChinaThe National Key Laboratory of Water Disater Prevention, Nanjing Hydraulic Research Institute, Nanjing, Jiangsu 210029, China; Corresponding author.The National Key Laboratory of Water Disater Prevention, Nanjing Hydraulic Research Institute, Nanjing, Jiangsu 210029, ChinaThe National Key Laboratory of Water Disater Prevention, Nanjing Hydraulic Research Institute, Nanjing, Jiangsu 210029, ChinaThe National Key Laboratory of Water Disater Prevention, Nanjing Hydraulic Research Institute, Nanjing, Jiangsu 210029, ChinaThe National Key Laboratory of Water Disater Prevention, Nanjing Hydraulic Research Institute, Nanjing, Jiangsu 210029, ChinaClimate change and human activities have markedly altered flow regimes, leading to deleterious consequences for riverine ecosystems. The widely employed hydrological modeling restoration method for conducting flow regime attribution often tends to underemphasize the impact of simulation errors on attribution outcomes. Moreover, the issue of ambiguous attribution targets in flow regime attribution remains a critical concern. This study presented a flow regime attribution framework integrated the hydrological model error correction. Indicators of hydrologic alteration (IHA) simulated by the XAJ and GR4J hydrological models and corrected using the quantile-mapping (QM) and convolutional neural network-long short term memory (CNN-LSTM) error correction methods, were employed to create 6 scenarios for assessing the impacts of climate change and human activities on flow regime changes. A case study was conducted in the Xitiaoxi basin, located in the upper reaches of Lake Tai in China. The results demonstrated that CNN-LSTM's superior performance over QM in correcting IHA metrics simulated by both XAJ and GR4J. The mean flow regime attribution results obtained from XAJ and GR4J simulations following the application of CNN-LSTM correction, mitigated the underestimation of contributions from the primary driving factors, in contrast to uncorrected or QM-corrected IHA metrics attribution results. Additionally, the regime attribution findings revealed all 33 IHA metrics experienced changes, with 73 % of them attributing human activities as the predominant driving forces. Substantial variations in IHA metrics exerted a certain degree of pressure on riverine habitats, particularly impacting the spawning and reproductive activities of piscine species.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1470160X23014073Flow regimeIHAClimate changeHuman activitiesHydrological model error correctionCNN-LSTM
spellingShingle Qin Wang
Yong Liu
Yintang Wang
Ye Zhang
Lingjie Li
Leizhi Wang
Separating climate change and human activities' effects on flow regime with hydrological model error correction
Ecological Indicators
Flow regime
IHA
Climate change
Human activities
Hydrological model error correction
CNN-LSTM
title Separating climate change and human activities' effects on flow regime with hydrological model error correction
title_full Separating climate change and human activities' effects on flow regime with hydrological model error correction
title_fullStr Separating climate change and human activities' effects on flow regime with hydrological model error correction
title_full_unstemmed Separating climate change and human activities' effects on flow regime with hydrological model error correction
title_short Separating climate change and human activities' effects on flow regime with hydrological model error correction
title_sort separating climate change and human activities effects on flow regime with hydrological model error correction
topic Flow regime
IHA
Climate change
Human activities
Hydrological model error correction
CNN-LSTM
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1470160X23014073
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