Hydrologic data has traditionally been collected with permanent installations of sophisticated and accurate but expensive monitoring equipment at limited numbers of sites. Consequently, observation frequency and costs are high, but spatial coverage of the data is limited. Citizen Hydrology can possibly overcome these challenges by leveraging easily scaled mobile technology and local residents to collect hydrologic data at many sites. However, understanding of how decreased observational frequency impacts the accuracy of key streamflow statistics such as minimum flow, maximum flow, and runoff is limited. To evaluate this impact, we randomly selected 50 active United States Geological Survey streamflow gauges in California. We used 7 years of...
Hydrologic models using water balance approaches typically use continuously observed streamflow data...
Hydrologic models using water balance approaches typically use continuously observed streamflow data...
International audienceLarge datasets of long-term streamflow measurements are widely used to infer a...
Hydrologic data has traditionally been collected with permanent installations of sophisticated and a...
Crowd‐based hydrological observations can supplement existing monitoring networks and allow data col...
Citizen science can provide spatially distributed data over large areas, including hydrological data...
<p>Monitoring stations have been used for decades to properly measure hydrological variables and bet...
Wise management of water resources requires data. Nevertheless, the amount of streamflow data being ...
Streamflow data are important for river management and the calibration of hydrological models. Howev...
Citizen science-based approaches to monitor the natural environment tend to be bimodal in maturity. ...
Hydrological monitoring is essential to guide evidence-based decision making necessary for sustainab...
Hydrological models have traditionally been used for the prediction in ungauged basins despite the r...
An increasing number of citizen science water monitoring programs is continuously collecting water q...
Hydrological models have traditionally been used for the prediction in ungauged basins despite the r...
Hydrologic models using water balance approaches typically use continuously observed streamflow data...
Hydrologic models using water balance approaches typically use continuously observed streamflow data...
International audienceLarge datasets of long-term streamflow measurements are widely used to infer a...
Hydrologic data has traditionally been collected with permanent installations of sophisticated and a...
Crowd‐based hydrological observations can supplement existing monitoring networks and allow data col...
Citizen science can provide spatially distributed data over large areas, including hydrological data...
<p>Monitoring stations have been used for decades to properly measure hydrological variables and bet...
Wise management of water resources requires data. Nevertheless, the amount of streamflow data being ...
Streamflow data are important for river management and the calibration of hydrological models. Howev...
Citizen science-based approaches to monitor the natural environment tend to be bimodal in maturity. ...
Hydrological monitoring is essential to guide evidence-based decision making necessary for sustainab...
Hydrological models have traditionally been used for the prediction in ungauged basins despite the r...
An increasing number of citizen science water monitoring programs is continuously collecting water q...
Hydrological models have traditionally been used for the prediction in ungauged basins despite the r...
Hydrologic models using water balance approaches typically use continuously observed streamflow data...
Hydrologic models using water balance approaches typically use continuously observed streamflow data...
International audienceLarge datasets of long-term streamflow measurements are widely used to infer a...