Universal fractal scaling in stream chemistry and its implications for solute transport and water quality trend detection

被引:166
作者
Kirchner, James W. [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Neal, Colin [4 ]
机构
[1] ETH, Dept Environm Syst Sci, CH-8092 Zurich, Switzerland
[2] Swiss Fed Res Inst WSL, CH-8903 Birmensdorf, Switzerland
[3] Univ Calif Berkeley, Dept Earth & Planetary Sci, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA
[4] Ctr Ecol & Hydrol, Wallingford OX10 8BB, Oxon, England
关键词
aquatic chemistry; watershed hydrology; environmental monitoring; pink noise; flicker noise; TIME-SERIES; HIGH-RESOLUTION; CATCHMENT; ACIDIFICATION; DEPOSITION; CHLORIDE; RUNOFF; NOISE; WALES;
D O I
10.1073/pnas.1304328110
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
The chemical dynamics of lakes and streams affect their suitability as aquatic habitats and as water supplies for human needs. Because water quality is typically monitored only weekly or monthly, however, the higher-frequency dynamics of stream chemistry have remained largely invisible. To illuminate a wider spectrum of water quality dynamics, rainfall and streamflow were sampled in two headwater catchments at Plynlimon, Wales, at 7-h intervals for 1-2 y and weekly for over two decades, and were analyzed for 45 solutes spanning the periodic table from H+ to U. Here we show that in streamflow, all 45 of these solutes, including nutrients, trace elements, and toxic metals, exhibit fractal 1/f(alpha) scaling on time scales from hours to decades (alpha = 1.05 +/- 0.15, mean +/- SD). We show that this fractal scaling can arise through dispersion of random chemical inputs distributed across a catchment. These 1/f time series are non-self-averaging: monthly, yearly, or decadal averages are approximately as variable, one from the next, as individual measurements taken hours or days apart, defying naive statistical expectations. (By contrast, stream discharge itself is nonfractal, and self-averaging on time scales of months and longer.) In the solute time series, statistically significant trends arise much more frequently, on all time scales, than one would expect from conventional t statistics. However, these same trends are poor predictors of future trends-much poorer than one would expect from their calculated uncertainties. Our results illustrate how 1/f time series pose fundamental challenges to trend analysis and change detection in environmental systems.
引用
收藏
页码:12213 / 12218
页数:6
相关论文
共 57 条
  • [1] The role of headwater streams in downstream water quality
    Alexander, Richard B.
    Boyer, Elizabeth W.
    Smith, Richard A.
    Schwarz, Gregory E.
    Moore, Richard B.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN WATER RESOURCES ASSOCIATION, 2007, 43 (01): : 41 - 59
  • [2] Beran J., 1994, Statistics for Long-Memory Processes
  • [3] High-frequency storm event isotope sampling reveals time-variant transit time distributions and influence of diurnal cycles
    Birkel, Christian
    Soulsby, Chris
    Tetzlaff, Doerthe
    Dunn, Sarah
    Spezia, Luigi
    [J]. HYDROLOGICAL PROCESSES, 2012, 26 (02) : 308 - 316
  • [4] Modelling catchment-scale water storage dynamics: reconciling dynamic storage with tracer-inferred passive storage
    Birkel, Christian
    Soulsby, Chris
    Tetzlaff, Doerthe
    [J]. HYDROLOGICAL PROCESSES, 2011, 25 (25) : 3924 - 3936
  • [5] CLIMATE SPECTRA AND DETECTING CLIMATE CHANGE
    BLOOMFIELD, P
    NYCHKA, D
    [J]. CLIMATIC CHANGE, 1992, 21 (03) : 275 - 287
  • [6] Scale effect on geomorphologic and kinematic dispersion
    Botter, G
    Rinaldo, A
    [J]. WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH, 2003, 39 (10) : SWC61 - SWC610
  • [7] Catchment mixing processes and travel time distributions
    Botter, Gianluca
    [J]. WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH, 2012, 48
  • [8] The value of high-resolution nutrient monitoring: A case study of the River Frome, Dorset, UK
    Bowes, Michael J.
    Smith, Jim T.
    Neal, Colin
    [J]. JOURNAL OF HYDROLOGY, 2009, 378 (1-2) : 82 - 96
  • [9] Boyer EW, 1997, HYDROL PROCESS, V11, P1635, DOI 10.1002/(SICI)1099-1085(19971015)11:12<1635::AID-HYP494>3.0.CO
  • [10] 2-H