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DOI10.1002/2015WR018349
Spatial statistical network models for stream and river temperature in New England, USA
Detenbeck, Naomi E.1; Morrison, Alisa C.1; Abele, Ralph W.2; Kopp, Darin A.1,3
发表日期2016-08-01
ISSN0043-1397
卷号52期号:8页码:6018-6040
英文摘要

Watershed managers are challenged by the need for predictive temperature models with sufficient accuracy and geographic breadth for practical use. We described thermal regimes of New England rivers and streams based on a reduced set of metrics for the May-September growing season (July or August median temperature, diurnal rate of change, and magnitude and timing of growing season maximum) chosen through principal component analysis of 78 candidate metrics. We then developed and assessed spatial statistical models for each of these metrics, incorporating spatial autocorrelation based on both distance along the flow network and Euclidean distance between points. Calculation of spatial autocorrelation based on travel or retention time in place of network distance yielded tighter-fitting Torgegrams with less scatter but did not improve overall model prediction accuracy. We predicted monthly median July or August stream temperatures as a function of median air temperature, estimated urban heat island effect, shaded solar radiation, main channel slope, watershed storage (percent lake and wetland area), percent coarse-grained surficial deposits, and presence or maximum depth of a lake immediately upstream, with an overall root-mean-square prediction error of 1.4 and 1.5 degrees C, respectively. Growing season maximum water temperature varied as a function of air temperature, local channel slope, shaded August solar radiation, imperviousness, and watershed storage. Predictive models for July or August daily range, maximum daily rate of change, and timing of growing season maximum were statistically significant but explained a much lower proportion of variance than the above models (5-14% of total).


英文关键词stream;river;temperature regime;spatial statistical model;New England
语种英语
WOS记录号WOS:000383684400018
来源期刊WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH
来源机构美国环保署
文献类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://gcip.llas.ac.cn/handle/2XKMVOVA/57395
作者单位1.US EPA, Atlantic Ecol Div, Narragansett, RI 02882 USA;
2.US EPA, Reg 1, Boston, MA USA;
3.Arizona State Univ, Wrigley Inst, Tempe, AZ USA
推荐引用方式
GB/T 7714
Detenbeck, Naomi E.,Morrison, Alisa C.,Abele, Ralph W.,et al. Spatial statistical network models for stream and river temperature in New England, USA[J]. 美国环保署,2016,52(8):6018-6040.
APA Detenbeck, Naomi E.,Morrison, Alisa C.,Abele, Ralph W.,&Kopp, Darin A..(2016).Spatial statistical network models for stream and river temperature in New England, USA.WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH,52(8),6018-6040.
MLA Detenbeck, Naomi E.,et al."Spatial statistical network models for stream and river temperature in New England, USA".WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH 52.8(2016):6018-6040.
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