If. Creed et Le. Band, EXPLORING FUNCTIONAL SIMILARITY IN THE EXPORT OF NITRATE-N FROM FORESTED CATCHMENTS - A MECHANISTIC MODELING APPROACH, Water resources research, 34(11), 1998, pp. 3079-3093
Functional similarity of catchments implies that we are able to identi
fy the combination of processes that creates a similar response of a s
pecific characteristic of a catchment. We applied the concept of funct
ional similarity to the export of NO3--N from catchments situated with
in the Turkey Lakes Watershed, a temperate forest in central Ontario,
Canada. Despite the homogeneous nature of the forest, these catchments
exhibit substantial variability in the concentrations of NO3--N in di
scharge waters, over both time and space. We hypothesized that functio
nal similarity in the export of NO3--N can be expressed as a function
of topographic complexity as topography regulates both the formation a
nd flushing of NO3--N within the catchment. We tested this hypothesis
by exploring whether topographically based similarity indices of the f
ormation and flushing of NO3--N capture the observed export of NO3--N
over a set of topographically diverse catchments. For catchments with
no elevated base concentrations of NO3--N the similarity indices expla
ined up to 58% df the variance in the export of NO3--N. For catchments
with elevated base concentrations of NO3--N, prediction of the export
of NO3--N may have been complicated by the fact that hydrology was go
verned by a two-component till, with an ablation till overlying a basa
l till. While the similarity indices captured peak NO3--N concentratio
ns exported from shallow flow paths emanating from the ablation till,
they did not capture base NO3--N concentrations exported from deep flo
w paths emanating from the basal till, emphasizing the importance of i
ncluding shallow and deep flow paths in future similarity indices. The
strength of the similarity indices is their potential ability to enab
le us to discriminate catchments that have visually similar surface ch
aracteristics but show distinct NO3--N export responses and, conversel
y, to group catchments that have visually dissimilar surface character
istics but are functionally similar. Furthermore, the similarity indic
es provide a potentially powerful method to scale and generalize NO3--
N export responses to other regions.