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Complete transformations of land cover from prairie, wetlands, and hardwood forests to row crop agriculture and urban centers are thought to have caused profound changes in hydrology in the Upper Midwestern US since the 1800s. In this study, we investigate four large (23 000–69 000 km2) Midwest river basins that span climate and land use gradients to understand how climate and agricultural drainage have influenced basin hydrology over the last 79 years. We use daily, monthly, and annual flow metrics to document streamflow changes and discuss those changes in the context of precipitation and land use changes. Since 1935, flow, precipitation, artificial drainage extent, and corn and soybean acreage have increased across the region. In extensively drained basins, we observe 2 to 4 fold increases in low flows and 1.5 to 3 fold increases in high and extreme flows. Using a water budget, we determined that the storage term has decreased in intensively drained and cultivated basins by 30–200 % since 1975, but increased by roughly 30 % in the less agricultural basin. Storage has generally decreased during spring and summer months and increased during fall and winter months in all watersheds. Thus, the loss of storage and enhanced hydrologic connectivity and efficiency imparted by artificialmore »
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Belmont, Patrick ; Stevens, John R. ; Czuba, Jonathan A. ; Kumarasamy, Karthik ; Kelly, Sara A. ( , Water Resources Research)
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Passalacqua, Paola ; Belmont, Patrick ; Staley, Dennis M. ; Simley, Jeffrey D. ; Arrowsmith, J Ramon ; Bode, Collin A. ; Crosby, Christopher ; DeLong, Stephen B. ; Glenn, Nancy F. ; Kelly, Sara A. ; et al ( , Earth-Science Reviews)