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Predicting flow duration and assessing its drivers in north-central Colorado using crowdsourced data

Date

2022

Authors

Peterson, David, author
Kampf, Stephanie K., advisor
Ross, Matt, committee member
Gallen, Sean, committee member

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Abstract

Headwater streams are globally important both ecologically and for human resource needs. These streams represent the majority of stream network length, but their flow regimes are often unknown. Streams can be classified by flow regime as perennial, intermittent, or ephemeral. These classifications are used in forest land management decisions and may affect Clean Water Act jurisdiction; however, the National Hydrography Dataset (NHD) often misclassifies headwater streams. The goal of this study is to model flow duration across the stream networks of eight subbasins in north-central Colorado. We used crowdsourced flow presence/absence data from 82 sites in the Stream Tracker program and eight flow sensors to train random forest regression models; these models predicted the fraction of time a stream flows from April-September for both the average from 2016-2020 (dubbed mean annual) and yearly averages (annual). Model predictor variables included climatic, physiographic, and land cover attributes of the study area. Models were developed using a sample of the sites for training and leaving the remaining sites for model testing. The resulting mean annual model's Nash-Sutcliffe efficiency (NSE) was 0.88 for test data, and the annual model's test data had an NSE value of 0.81. We found climate variables such as snow persistence, precipitation, and potential evapotranspiration most influential in predicting flow fraction based on the random forest-ranked variable importance. Forested and herbaceous land cover as well as depth to bedrock, available water storage, hydraulic conductivity, hydrologic soil group, drainage area, and watershed curvature were also identified as important drivers. We developed maps of predicted flow fractions and compared them to NHD flow classifications. In the Cache La Poudre subbasin, the mean annual model predicted perennial flow in 10% of streams and intermittent or ephemeral flow in 90% of streams. Our model predicted nonperennial flow for 76% of the streams that were mapped as perennial in the medium-resolution NHD. Based on these findings, the NHD over-represented perennial streams, classifying them three times more than our model, and under-represented intermittent and ephemeral streams by 32% in our study area. The annual model captured interannual variability in flow fraction and highlighted isolated areas of high variability in flow fraction between years in mid-to-low elevations. The models we developed using crowdsourced data can improve flow classifications of headwater streams and inform resource management decisions in northern Colorado. Crowdsourced streamflow data can be used in streamflow predictions anywhere that nonperennial flow is common.

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Subject

flow duration
nonperennial streams
crowdsourced
random forest
intermittent streams

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