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Storage‐discharge relationships at different catchment scales based on local high‐precision gravimetry
Authors:Benjamin Creutzfeldt  Peter A Troch  Andreas Güntner  Ty P A Ferré  Thomas Graeff  Bruno Merz
Institution:1. GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences, Section Hydrology, Potsdam, Germany;2. University of Arizona, Department of Hydrology and Water Resources, Tucson, USA;3. University of Potsdam, Institute of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Potsdam, Germany
Abstract:In hydrology, the storage‐discharge relationship is a fundamental catchment property. Understanding what controls this relationship is at the core of catchment science. To date, there are no direct methods to measure water storage at catchment scales (101–103 km2). In this study, we use direct measurements of terrestrial water storage dynamics by means of superconducting gravimetry in a small headwater catchment of the Regen River, Germany, to derive empirical storage‐discharge relationships in nested catchments of increasing scale. Our results show that the local storage measurements are strongly related to streamflow dynamics at larger scales (> 100 km2; correlation coefficient = 0.78–0.81), but at small scale, no such relationship exists (~ 1 km2; correlation coefficients = ?0.11). The geologic setting in the region can explain both the disconnection between local water storage and headwater runoff, and the connectivity between headwater storage and streams draining larger catchment areas. More research is required to understand what controls the form of the observed storage‐discharge relationships at the catchment scale. This study demonstrates that high‐precision gravimetry can provide new insights into the complex relationship between state and response of hydrological systems. Copyright © 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Keywords:water storage  high‐precision gravimeter  storage‐discharge relationship  nested catchments
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