Bogo Portal Chagas, V., Chaffe, P. L. B., & Blöschl, G. (2024). Drought-Rich Periods Are More Likely Than Flood-Rich Periods in Brazil. Water Resources Research, 60(10), 1–16. https://doi.org/10.1029/2023WR035851
E222-02 - Forschungsbereich Ingenieurhydrologie E222-01 - Forschungsbereich Wasserbau und Umwelthydraulik
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Journal:
Water Resources Research
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ISSN:
0043-1397
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Date (published):
26-Oct-2024
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Number of Pages:
16
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Publisher:
AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
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Peer reviewed:
Yes
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Keywords:
droughts; extremes; floods; hazards; South America; time clustering; Brazil
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Abstract:
Streamflow exhibits persistent decadal variability; however, it is unclear if the magnitude and spatial extent of these variabilities are symmetric for droughts and floods. Here, we examine drought-rich and flood-rich periods in 319 streamflow gauges in Brazil from 1940 to 2020. Drought- and flood-rich periods are detected by computing annual streamflow minima and maxima time series and using scan statistics to verify if events exceeding a threshold follow a Bernoulli process. We contrast streamflow time clustering with rainfall, evaporation, water abstraction, the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation (AMO), and the Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO). We detected a higher spatial frequency of drought- than flood-rich periods. For 5-year return period thresholds, drought-rich periods are observed in 81% of the basins, 16.7 times the false positive rate (4.8%) and 4.7 times flood-rich periods (17%). This asymmetry is linked with sharp increases in water abstractions since the 1990s and a higher prevalence of rainfall-poor periods (41% of gauges) compared to rainfall-rich (22% of gauges), which we interpret as being further amplified into drought-rich periods due to an interannual persistence of water storage deficits. Brazil experienced a dry period until the 1960s, extensive flooding in the 1980s, and record low flows from the 2000s onward. Drought and flood-rich periods are well aligned with rainfall clustering, water abstractions, the AMO and PDO. Droughts-rich periods are more frequent in shorter time scales (several years to one decade) and flood-rich periods in longer time scales (a few decades). Our findings highlight the nonlinearity and asymmetry of drought and flood change at decadal scales.
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Research Areas:
Efficient Utilisation of Material Resources: 30% Environmental Monitoring and Climate Adaptation: 30% Modeling and Simulation: 40%