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Lecture 7: Fluxes and Streamflow

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Title: Lecture 7: Fluxes and Streamflow


1
Lecture 7 Fluxes and Streamflow
  • Some review of flux units and computation for
    homework 2
  • National Streamflow Information Program
  • Reading Executive Summary from NSIP report
    http//www.nap.edu/books/0309092108/html/

2
Precipitation and Evaporation Fluxes
Evaporation, E, and precipitation, P, fluxes In
the NARR are stated as mass fluxes in kg/m2-s
1 kg/m2-s 86400 mm/day
1 kg/m2-3hr 8 mm/day
3
NARR-A, July 2003, 3 hour data
1 kg/m2-3hr 8 mm/day
4
National Streamflow Information Program
  • NSIP applied to the United States
  • Texas Stream Gage Assessment
  • Streamflow information in time and space

National Academy Press http//www.nap.edu
5
NSIP Goals
  • Interstate and International Waters (Borders and
    Compacts)
  • Flood Forecasts (NWS sites)
  • River Basin Outflows (Water Budgets)
  • Sentinel Watersheds (Regionalization and Long
    Term Trends of natural flows)
  • Water Quality (NAQWA, NASQAN,

6
NSIP GoalsWater Management and Regional Hydrology
  • Interstate and International Waters (Borders and
    Compacts)
  • Flood Forecasts (NWS sites)
  • River Basin Outflows (Water Budgets)
  • Sentinel Watersheds (Regionalization and Long
    Term Trends of natural flows)
  • Water Quality (NAQWA, NASQAN,

7
Interstate and International Waters(515 gages)
8
2. NWS Forecast Sites(3244 Gages)
9
3. River Basin Outflows(450 gages)
For Water Budgeting
10
4. Sentinel Watersheds (874 Gages)
Regionalization and Long Term Trends in
Streamflow (stations measuring natural flow in
undisturbed lands)
11
5. Water Quality (210 gages)
NAQWA, NASQAN, .
12
All NSIP Stations (4424 gages)
13
Source of NSIP Gages
  • Active USGS gages 2796 (63)
  • Other agency gages 307 (7)
  • Inactive gages 837 (19)
  • New gages 484 (11)

3103 existing gages (70) 1221 inactive or new
gages (30)
14
Number of NSIP Gages
Rhode Island (2)
Delaware (4)
Kansas (166)
Colorado (171)
California (201)
Texas (416)
15
1980s Gage Network Goals
  • Regional Hydrology relating basin
    characteristics to streamflow under natural
    conditions
  • Hydrologic Systems water accounting including
    diversions, return flows
  • Legal Obligations treaties, compacts and
    decrees
  • Planning and Design dam, levee, water supply,
  • Project Operation reservoir releases,
    hydropower
  • Hydrologic Forecasts floods, flow volumes
  • Water-Quality Monitoring NASQAN
  • Research gages for specific studies
  • Other recreation, canoeists, fishermen

16
Comparison of Goals
NSIP Goals
1980s Goals
  • Regional Hydrology
  • Hydrologic Systems
  • Legal Obligations
  • Planning and Design
  • Project Operation
  • Hydrologic Forecasts
  • Water-Quality Monitoring
  • Research
  • Other
  • Sentinel Watersheds
  • River Basin Outflows
  • Borders and Compacts
  • No
  • No
  • NWS Forecast Sites
  • Water Quality
  • No
  • No

17
Texas Gage Network Assessment
  • Carried out by USGS and Texas Water Development
    Board (principal local cooperator)
  • Goals
  • Regionalization estimate flows or flow
    characteristics at ungaged sites in 11
    hydrologically similar regions
  • Major Flow obtain flow rates and volumes in
    large streams
  • Outflow from the State account for streamflow
    leaving the State
  • Streamflow conditions assessment assess current
    conditions with regard to long-term data and
    define temporal trends in flow

18
NSIP Goal 416 daily stations
Existing 312 daily stations, 17 annual peak
stations
1962
1970
1900
1920
1940
1930
1950
1960
1980
1990
1910
Figure 1
19
Texas Stream Gaging Network
Active Stations
Discontinued Stations
Figure 2
20
River Basins and Hydrologic Regions
Figure 3
21
Regional Optimization Model
  • Based on Generalized Least Squares Regression
    separates model error from error due to finite
    sample size
  • Estimating mean annual flow and 25 year peak flow
    using basin characteristics with equations for
    each hydrologic region
  • Three planning horizons (5yr, 10yr, 20yr)
  • Active or discontinued stations in natural
    watersheds considered
  • Start with all stations then step backwards,
    eliminating least informative station at each step

22
Estimating the 25-year Peak Streamflow
5yr
5yr
10yr
10yr
20yr
20yr
Mean Sampling Error
5yr
10yr
20yr
  • As number of stations increases, sampling error
    decreases until a minimum is reached
  • As planning horizon increases, sampling error
    decreases

Number of Stations
23
Results of Regional Optimization
  • Stations on steepest part of the curve offer the
    most valuable regional hydrologic information
    relative to basin characteristics
  • Sampling error increases as you go west and
    climate gets drier
  • Mean annual flow 6.6 to 114.3
  • 25yr peak flow 9.9 to 28.5
  • Much less error in regression equations for 25yr
    peak flow than mean annual flow in arid regions
  • Greater variability in error between regions than
    by adding stations within a region

24
Flow Correlations
  • Strong correlation in flows for upstream and
    downstream stations on the same river
  • 61 of 81 station pairs analyzed for mean annual
    flow have correlation coefficient gt 0.9
  • 43 of 129 station pairs analyzed for 25 year flow
    have correlation coefficient gt 0.9
  • Select stations for core network that are not
    highly correlated with other selected stations

25
Interstation Correlation of Mean Annual Flow
26
Interstation Correlation of 25yr Peak Flow
Figure 12
27
Results of Texas Study
  • Proposed core network of 263 stations for
    regional hydrology purposes in natural watersheds
  • 205 active stations (78)
  • NSIP for Texas requires 416 stations
  • Border (10), NWS (345), Basin (36), Sentinel
    (87), Water Quality (16) (some gages serve
    multiple goals)
  • Existing Gage Network of 312 stations
  • Difficult to make comparisons between national
    and regional studies because criteria are
    different

28
Streamflow Information System
The stream gaging activity is no longer
considered a network of observation points, but
rather an information system in which data are
provided by both observation and synthesis
(Fontaine et al, 1984, Cost Effectiveness of
the Stream-Gaging Program in Maine, USGS Water
Supply Paper 2244)
29
Current Stream Gaging Network( 7000 gages of
which 3000 are in NSIP)
30
Water Watch Real Time Data( 5000 gages)
31
Streamstats
32
Streamflow Information in Space and Time
Future Possibilities
Current
Time
Real Time data
Historical daily mean discharge
Streamstats
Streamflow statistics
At Gages
Anywhere on a Stream
Space
33
  • Data Collection
  • Stream gages
  • Intense data collection during extreme events
  • Water quality
  • Stream Information
  • Flow,
  • Velocity, width, depth,
  • Sediment, N, P, bacterial loads

Stream Information Cycle
Gaged point
Ungaged point
  • Data Management
  • Tabular, statistics, unit values
  • Quality assurance
  • Aerial photography, satellite imagery
  • Information Dissemination
  • Internet (Water Watch, Streamstats)
  • Reports
  • Telemetry using radio, satellite
  • Information Generation
  • Regional regression equations
  • Data assimilation and modeling
  • Estimation at ungaged sites

34
Point Design Model
Site gages so as to accurately measure the
vertical flux (e.g. precipitation) over a domain
Domain
35
Network Design Model
Site gages so as to measure flow through a stream
network (Horizontal flux vs vertical flux)
Siting of a set of gages partitions drainage
basin into a set of subbasins for each gage
A gage supports flow estimation upstream and
downstream of its location on the stream network
36
Coverage Design Model
Take a space and subdivide it into subspaces With
an area for each point e.g. service areas of
fire stations
37
Coverages of the Guadalupe Basin
NWS forecast Watersheds (flooding)
Guadalupe HydroNetwork
EPA TMDL Segments (water quality)
TNRCC water availability points (water supply)
38
NSIP
  • NSIP design is a combination of the network and
    coverage design models
  • Each of the five goals has a set of gage points
    and a corresponding drainage area coverage
  • Intersection of these five drainage area
    coverages for each goal defines the NSIP drainage
    area coverage
  • Gage provides point flow information on a stream
    at a point and also of the flow increment between
    this location and that of adjacent stream gages.

39
San Marcos basin as a coverage model
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