Hayashi M, van der Kamp G, Rudolph DL. 1998. Water and solute transfer between a prairie wetland and adjacent uplands, 1. Water balance. Journal of Hydrology 207: 42-55.
These authors report water balance data and analysis in the first of a pair of papers about the hydrology of wetlands in the prairie pothole region of central Saskatchewan. The second paper concerns dissolved material movements in the same example study system.
Through a series of measurements of water and water-related properties of soil as well as precipitation, total water balance and total water movements within the wetland were estimated. Direct precipitation and evaporation accounts for a small fraction of the total volume of water entering and leaving the pond in the middle of the hectare-scale wetland and surrounding catchment of uplands. Most of the water entering the pond is in the form of snowmelt during spring, and most of the water leaving the pond is in the form of horizontal groundwater flow, relatively shallowly (i.e. above a redox discontinuity at about 5-6m depth), driven strongly by evapotranspiration through the “willow ring” surrounding the pond and through crops (principally wheat during this experiment) on the uplands. Only a small amount of water is exported down to the aquifer; of a total input of 780mm into the pond, only about 3mm goes to recharging the underlying aquifer. Figure 3 provides definitions of the terminology, and Figure 12 the estimates of water balance.
This paper was on the suggested reading list for SLSC 834 in August 2010.
Friday, August 20, 2010
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment