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Joint probability analysis of precipitation and streamflow extremesUnknown Date (has links)
This thesis focuses on evaluation of joint occurrence of extreme precipitation and streamflow events at several hydrologic structures in South Florida. An analysis of twelve years storm events and their corresponding peak streamflow events during wet and dry season including annual peaks considering two seasons was performed first. Dependence analysis using time series data of precipitation and streamflow was carried out next. The analysis included use of storm events with different temporal lags from the time of occurrence of peak streamflow events. Bi-variate joint probability was found to be appropriate to analyze the joint occurrence of events. Evaluation of joint exceedence probabilities under two phases of Atlantic multidecadal oscillation (AMO) influencing south Florida was also evaluated. All methodologies are evaluated for application using observations at several structures in the case study region to provide advances and valuable insights on joint extremes of precipitation and streamflows. / by Chia-hung Lin. / Thesis (M.S.C.S.)--Florida Atlantic University, 2013. / Includes bibliography. / Mode of access: World Wide Web. / System requirements: Adobe Reader.
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Beyond Water Restrictions: Informing Effective Lawn Watering BehaviorUnknown Date (has links)
Evaluating trends of historical rainfall on a weekly and seasonal basis is needed
for optimizing the design and implementation of lawn water conservation strategies like
outdoor water restrictions. While “day of the week” water restrictions are a typical
strategy to limit the frequency and duration of urban lawn water use, they may not
necessarily result in more conservative behaviors from end-users. Because weekly
rainfall and local climate variables are seldom taken into account in water restriction
strategies, they are not connected to actual lawn water demand. However, since lawn
water demand is directly related to weekly rainfall totals, not to a particular number of
watering days per week, water restriction schedules have the potential to unintentionally
promote overwatering. This study investigated the weekly patterns of average seasonal rainfall and evapotranspiration in South Florida to determine the typical variability of
weekly net irrigation needs and found that typical wet season weekly rainfall often
provides a significant amount of water to meet the demand of residential lawns and
landscapes. This finding underscores opportunity to reduce supplemental overwatering
in residential landscapes if watering guidelines were modified to recognize seasonal
average weekly rainfall in this region
This study also tested a rainfall-based water conservation strategy to determine if
providing residents with information about how local rainfall could promote more
effective lawn watering behavior than just water restrictions alone. Experimental
households reduced lawn water use by up to 61% compared to the control group by the
end of the study. These results demonstrate that the neighborhood “rain-watered lawn”
signs helped experimental study group households become more aware of rainfall as the
primary input of water to their lawns. This study also investigated the role that lawn
irrigation from self-supplied sources plays in the urban lawn water demand and
investigates how the lawn water use and lawn watering behaviors of households that
source from self-supply differ from those who source from the public supply. / Includes bibliography. / Dissertation (Ph.D.)--Florida Atlantic University, 2016. / FAU Electronic Theses and Dissertations Collection
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Residential lawn water use and lawn irrigation practices: Wellington, FloridaUnknown Date (has links)
Water conservation initiatives seldom quantify the volume of water that is at stake in lawn watering. In many communities, including those in South Florida, outdoor water use, which includes lawn irrigation, is not metered separately from indoor water use and is indistinguishable from indoor water usage. A large number of residents use self supply non-potable wells for lawn irrigation that are not regulated by the South Florida Water Management District. The result is that residential lawn water use is difficult to account for and quantify. This thesis project addressed these difficulties by combining semistructured interviews, daily watering observations and irrigation system audits to ascertain how much public supply water and self supply (well) water was being used for residential lawn irrigation. The study also examined lawn watering practices and how factors such as: precipitation, the minimum plant needs of St. Augstinegrass, and how local watering restrictions influenced watering behavior. / by Felicia D. Survis. / Thesis (M.S.)--Florida Atlantic University, 2010. / Includes bibliography. / Electronic reproduction. Boca Raton, Fla., 2010. Mode of access: World Wide Web.
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