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A novel construct for scaling groundwater–river interactions based on machine-guided hydromorphic classification
Author(s) -
Zhangshuan Hou,
Huiying Ren,
Christopher J L Murray,
Xianfang Song,
Yilin Fang,
Evan Arntzen,
Xingyuan Chen,
James Stegen,
Maoyi Huang,
Xingyuan Chen,
Zhuoran Duan,
William Perkins,
Marshall C. Richmond,
Timothy D. Scheibe
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
environmental research letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.37
H-Index - 124
ISSN - 1748-9326
DOI - 10.1088/1748-9326/ac24ce
Subject(s) - watershed , extrapolation , scale (ratio) , computer science , environmental science , scaling , hydrology (agriculture) , biogeochemical cycle , machine learning , statistics , ecology , geology , geography , cartography , mathematics , geometry , geotechnical engineering , biology
Hydrologic exchange between river channels and adjacent subsurface environments is a key process that influences water quality and ecosystem function in river corridors. Predictive numerical models are needed to understand responses of river corridors to environmental change and to support sustainable watershed management. We posit that systematic hydromorphic classification provides a scaling construct that facilitates extrapolation of outputs from local-scale mechanistic models to reduced-order models applicable at reach and watershed scales. This in turn offers the potential to improve large-scale predictions of river corridor hydrobiogeochemical processes. Here we present a new machine-guided hydromorphic classification methodology that addresses the key requirements of this objective, and we demonstrate its application to a segment of the Columbia River in the northwestern United States. The resulting hydromorphic classes form spatially coherent and physically interpretable hydromorphic units that exhibit distinct behaviors in terms of distributions of subsurface transit times (a primary control on critical biogeochemical reactions). This approach forms the basis of ongoing research that is evaluating the formulation of reduced-order models and transferability of results to other river reaches and larger scales.

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