Alluvial characteristics, groundwater-surface water exchange and hydrological retention in headwater streams

被引:0
|
作者
Morrice, JA
Valett, HM
Dahm, CN
Campana, ME
机构
[1] Department of Biology, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque
[2] Dept. of Earth and Planet. Sciences, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque
关键词
transient storage zone; hyporrheic zone; hydraulic conductivity; nutrient retention; OTIS; stream ecosystem;
D O I
10.1002/(SICI)1099-1085(19970315)11:3<253::AID-HYP439>3.0.CO;2-J
中图分类号
TV21 [水资源调查与水利规划];
学科分类号
081501 ;
摘要
Conservative solute injections were conducted in three first-order montane streams of different geological composition to assess the influence of parent lithology and alluvial characteristics on the hydrological retention of nutrients. Three study sites were established: (1) Aspen Creek, in a sandstone-siltstone catchment with a fine-grained alluvium of low hydraulic conductivity (1.3 x 10(-4) cm/s), (2) Rio Calaveras, which flows through volcanic tuff with alluvium of intermediate grain size and hydraulic conductivity (1.2 x 10(-3) cm/s), and (3) Gallina Creek, located in a granite/gneiss catchment of coarse, poorly sorted alluvium with high hydraulic conductivity (4.1 x 10(-3) cm/s). All sites were instrumented with networks of shallow groundwater wells to monitor interstitial solute transport. The rate and extent of groundwater-surface water exchange, determined by the solute response in wells, increased with increasing hydraulic conductivity. The direction of surface water-groundwater interaction within a stream was related to local variation in vertical and horizontal hydraulic gradients. Experimental tracer responses in the surface stream were simulated with a one-dimensional solute transport model with inflow and storage components (OTIS). Model-derived measures of hydrological retention showed a corresponding increase with increasing hydraulic conductivity. To assess the temporal variability of hydrological retention, solute injection experiments were conducted in Gallina Creek under four seasonal flow regimes during which surface discharge ranged from baseflow (0.75 l/s in October) to high (75 l/s during spring snowmelt). Model-derived hydrological retention decreased with increasing discharge. The results of our intersite comparison suggest that hydrological retention is strongly influenced by the geologic setting and alluvial characteristics of the stream catchment. Temporal variation in hydrological retention at Gallina Creek is related to seasonal changes in discharge, highlighting the need for temporal resolution in studies of the dynamics of surface water-groundwater interactions in stream ecosystems. (C) 1997 by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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页码:253 / 267
页数:15
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