“…Since the early 1980s, the hydrological model HYDROTEL (Fortin et al, 1995(Fortin et al, , 2001Turcotte et al, 2007) has been developed by a group of researchers at the "Institut National de Recherche Scientifique" (INRS) in Quebec City, Canada. It has been applied on several watersheds-especially over the Quebec province-to study, among other things, the impacts of hydrological model structure in climate change impact assessment studies (Chen et al, 2011;Poulin et al, 2011;Velazquez et al, 2013), the simulation of the effects of wetlands on watershed hydrology under current and future climate and land cover conditions (e.g., Blanchette et al, 2019;Fossey et al, 2015Fossey et al, , 2016Fossey & Rousseau, 2016a, 2016b, the simulation of snow water equivalent (SWE; Oreiller et al, 2014), and the assessment of future trends in low flows (Foulon et al, 2018). Since many years, HYDROTEL is the main hydrological model used operationally at the Direction de l'Expertise Hydrique (Québec's Water Expertise Direction) for short-term flow forecasting (Turcotte et al, 2004) and for simulating the impacts of climate change on river flows as part of the Hydroclimatic Atlas of Southern Quebec (DEH, 2018a).…”