Journal article
Multiple hydrological attractors under stochastic daily forcing: 1. Can multiple attractors exist?
TJ Peterson, AW Western
WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH | AMERICAN GEOPHYSICAL UNION | Published : 2014
DOI: 10.1002/2012WR013003
Abstract
Including positive feedbacks in hydrological models has recently been shown to result in complex behavior with multiple steady states. When a large disturbance, say a major drought, is simulated within such models the hydrology changes. Once the disturbance ends the hydrology does not return to that prior to the disturbance, but rather, persists within an alternate state. These multiple steady states (henceforth attractors) exist for a single model parameterization and cause the system to have a finite resilience to such transient disturbances. A limitation of past hydrological resilience studies is that multiple attractors have been identified using mean annual or mean monthly forcing. Cons..
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Awarded by Australian Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
The authors are grateful for the financial support received from the Australian Research Council (grant LP0991280), the Department of Sustainability and Environment, Victoria, Australia; the Department of Primary Industries, Victoria, Australia; and the Bureau of Meteorology, Australia. The authors thank Murugesu Sivapalan, Stan Schymanski, and an anonymous reviewer for their valuable comments and suggestions. The authors also thank Robert M. Argent of the Bureau of Meteorology, Australia, for his review of the paper prior to submission.