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Abstract As stormwater control measures (SCMs) capture surface runoff from impervious areas, a shift in the water balance and flow regime components may emerge in urban watersheds, but the amount of SCM treatment needed to detectably shift these components may vary. We used the Soil and Water Assessment Tool (SWAT) hydrologic model to assess the sensitivity of 16 hydrologic metrics as an increasingly dense rain garden SCM network was applied across the West Creek watershed, near Cleveland, Ohio (USA). As the area treated by SCMs increased, annual baseflow increases matched decreases in surface runoff, while water yield and evapotranspiration changes remained small. The stream's peak response to rainfall decreased with SCM implementation across storm sizes, ranging from the threshold rainfall depth (4.8 mm) to values higher than the design storm of a single rain garden (19 mm). SCM networks draining >20% of directly connected impervious area (DCIA) significantly decreased the magnitude of discharges with a return period of less than 1 year, the percentage of time above mean flow, and flashiness. Recession slopes and annual 1‐ and 7‐day low flows exhibited a slight response that fell within uncertainty limits of the model. Water balance and rainfall response metrics exhibited the greatest sensitivity to different intensities of stormwater management, while infrequent high and low flows were resistant to detectable change even at high levels of SCM treatment when model uncertainty was included.more » « less
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