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Environmental concentrations as ratios of random variables
Author(s) -
Saverio Perri,
Amilcare Porporato
Publication year - 2022
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/ac4a9f
Subject(s) - environmental science , ecosystem , estuary , limiting , nitrate , soil water , stability (learning theory) , variable (mathematics) , volume (thermodynamics) , atmospheric sciences , soil science , hydrology (agriculture) , ecology , environmental chemistry , mathematics , computer science , chemistry , geology , biology , mathematical analysis , mechanical engineering , physics , geotechnical engineering , quantum mechanics , machine learning , engineering
Human-induced environmental change increasingly threatens the stability of socio-ecological systems. Careful statistical characterization of environmental concentrations is critical to quantify and predict the consequences of such changes on human and ecosystems conditions. However, while concentrations are naturally defined as the ratio between solute mass and solvent volume, they have rarely been treated as such, typically limiting the analysis to familiar distributions generically used for any other environmental variable. To address this gap, we propose a more general framework that leverages their definition explicitly as ratios of random variables. We show that the resulting models accurately describe the behavior of nitrate plus nitrite in US rivers and salt concentration in estuaries in the Everglades by accounting for heavy tails potentially emerging when the water volume fluctuates around low values. Models that preclude the presence of heavy tails and the related high probability of extreme concentrations could significantly undermine the accuracy of diagnostic frameworks and the effectiveness of mitigation interventions, especially for soil contamination characterized by a water volume (i.e. soil moisture) frequently approaching zero.

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