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A hierarchical model of daily stream temperature using air-water temperature synchronization, autocorrelation, and time lags

Dates

Creation
2018-06-20 14:15:27
Last Update
2018-06-26 13:14:26
Publication Date
2016
Start Date
2016-01-01 05:00:00
End Date
2016-01-01 05:00:00

Citation

Benjamin Letcher(Principal Investigator), North Atlantic Landscape Conservation Cooperative(administrator), Northeast Climate Adaptation Science Center(Cooperator/Partner), 2018-06-20(creation), 2018-06-26(lastUpdate), 2016(Publication), A hierarchical model of daily stream temperature using air-water temperature synchronization, autocorrelation, and time lags, https://www.sciencebase.gov/catalog/item/56d96027e4b015c306f726ad

Summary

ABSTRACTWater temperature is a primary driver of stream ecosystems and commonly forms the basis of stream classifications. Robust models of stream temperature are critical as the climate changes, but estimating daily stream temperature poses several important challenges. We developed a statistical model that accounts for many challenges that can make stream temperature estimation difficult. Our model identifies the yearly period when air and water temperature are synchronized, accommodates hysteresis, incorporates time lags, deals with missing data and autocorrelation and can include external drivers. In a small stream network, the model performed well (RMSE D 0:59 °C), identified a clear warming trend (0.63 °C decade-1) and a widening [...]

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Material Request Instructions

Northeast Climate Adaptation Science Center(Data Owner); North Atlantic Landscape Conservation Cooperative(Data Owner)

Additional Information

Identifiers

Type Scheme Key
DOI https://www.sciencebase.gov/vocab/category/item/identifier 10.7717/peerj.1727

Citation Extension

citationTypepublication
languageeng
noteLetcher et al. (2016), A hierarchical model of daily stream temperature using air-water temperature synchronization, autocorrelation, and time lags. PeerJ 4:e1727; DOI 10.7717/peerj.1727

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