Instructive Surprises in the Hydrological Functioning of Landscapes

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Version: Final published version
License: CC BY 4.0
Serval ID
serval:BIB_AB442C5CF820
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Title
Instructive Surprises in the Hydrological Functioning of Landscapes
Journal
Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences
Author(s)
Kirchner James W., Benettin Paolo, van Meerveld Ilja
ISSN
0084-6597
1545-4495
Publication state
Published
Issued date
31/05/2023
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
51
Pages
277-299
Language
english
Abstract
Landscapes receive water from precipitation and then transport, store, mix, and release it, both downward to streams and upward to vegetation. How they do this shapes floods, droughts, biogeochemical cycles, contaminant transport, and the health of terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems. Because many of the key processes occur invisibly in the subsurface, our conceptualization of them has often relied heavily on physical intuition. In recent decades, however, much of this intuition has been overthrown by field observations and emerging measurement methods, particularly involving isotopic tracers. Here we summarize key surprises that have transformed our understanding of hydrological processes at the scale of hillslopes and drainage basins. These surprises have forced a shift in perspective from process conceptualizations that are relatively static, homogeneous, linear, and stationary to ones that are predominantly dynamic, heterogeneous, nonlinear, and nonstationary. ▪ Surprising observations and novel measurements are transforming our understanding of the hydrological functioning of landscapes. ▪ Even during storm peaks, streamflow is composed mostly of water that has been stored in the landscape for weeks, months, or years. ▪ Streamflow and tree water uptake often originate from different subsurface storages and from different seasons’ precipitation. ▪ Stream networks dynamically extend and retract as the landscape wets and dries, and many stream reaches lose flow into underlying aquifers.
Keywords
catchment, ecohydrology, hillslope, hydrology, isotopes, runoff
Create date
23/11/2023 14:29
Last modification date
02/05/2024 17:01
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