“…In the last years, however, temporary and ephemeral streams have gained increasing attention from the scientific community. Many experimental studies have been conducted in different regions of the World to quantify event‐based and seasonal dynamics of the active stream network (Agren et al., 2015; Blyth & Rodda, 1973; Day, 1978; Datry et al., 2016; Doering et al., 2007; Durighetto et al., 2020; Godsey & Kirchner, 2014; Goulsbra et al., 2014; Gregory & Walling, 1968; Jaeger et al., 2007; Jensen et al., 2017, 2019; Lovill et al., 2018; Malard et al., 2006; Peirce & Lindsay, 2015; Roberts & Klingeman, 1972; Shaw, 2016; Shaw et al., 2017; van Meerveld et al., 2019; Whiting & Godsey, 2016; Zimmer & McGlynn, 2017). These field surveys revealed that stream network expansion/contraction generated by climate variability represents a general rule rather than an exception, and a major fraction of the existing drainage network is, in most circumstances, dynamical (e.g., Datry et al., 2014).…”