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WATERSHED MANAGEMENT

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Photo: Alex Cherry. SURFACE WATER USE LAW. General Principles. No one owns water ... Greene County Soil & Water Conservation District Stream Restoration Program. 2003. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: WATERSHED MANAGEMENT


1
WATERSHED MANAGEMENT
  • DEFINITION
  • Analysis, protection, repair, utilization, and
    maintenance of drainage basins for control and
    conservation of water resources
  • RELATED TERM Hydrology

2
WATERSHED MANAGEMENT
  • Important for foresters because
  • Water necessary for wildlife
  • Water necessary for humans
  • Silviculture affects water quality quantity

3
WATERSHED MANAGEMENTOUR TOPICS
  • The Hydrologic Cycle
  • Water Use and the Law
  • Management Issues

4
THE HYDROLOGIC CYCLE (Figs. 16.1 16.2)
  • Hydrologic Cycle Equation P Q ET S
  • P precipitation
  • Q runoff (streamflow)
  • ET evapotranspiration
  • S watershed storage change
  • Assuming S 0 and rearranging
  • Q P - ET

5
THE HYDROLOGIC CYCLE
  • Precipitation (P)
  • Interception (I)
  • Throughfall
  • Channel Interception (CI)
  • Infiltration (F)
  • Subsurface Storm Flow (SSSF)
  • Base Flow (ground water flow, BF)
  • Surface Runoff (SRO)
  • Evapotranspiration (ET)
  • Potential ET
  • Actual ET
  • Watershed Storage Changes (S)

6
THE HYDROLOGIC CYCLE
  • Precipitation (P)
  • Determined by factors external to watershed
  • Interception (I)
  • Precipitation landing on plants may
  • Evaporate
  • Become stemflow
  • Become canopy drip
  • Determined by vegetation characteristics

7
THE HYDROLOGIC CYCLE
  • Throughfall
  • Precipitation reaching the forest floor (canopy
    drip direct precipitation)
  • Determined by vegetation characteristics
  • Channel Interception (CI)
  • Precipitation falling on stream surfaces
  • Determined by stream surface area

8
THE HYDROLOGIC CYCLE
  • Infiltration (F)
  • Water entering soil
  • May percolate (move down through soil)
  • May become
  • Subsurface storm flow (SSSF)
  • Base flow (ground water flow, BF)
  • Watershed storage change (S)
  • Surface runoff (SRO) occurs if soils maximum
    infiltration rate is exceeded
  • Determined by watershed factors

9
THE HYDROLOGIC CYCLE
  • Evapotranspiration (ET)
  • Evaporation transpiration
  • Potential ET may exceed actual ET
  • Determined by climate watershed factors

10
THE HYDROLOGIC CYCLE
  • Watershed Storage Changes (S)
  • Snow ice fields
  • Water in surface depressions
  • Soil moisture (groundwater)
  • Determined by climate watershed factors

11
THE HYDROLOGIC CYCLE
  • Remember our runoff (streamflow) equation?
  • Q P - ET
  • Another runoff (streamflow) equation
  • Q CI SRO SSSF BF
  • Rapid response if SRO and/or SSSF high
  • BF maintains streamflow between storm events

12
HYDROLOGIC MEASUREMENTS
  • Rain gauges
  • http//www.srh.noaa.gov/tlh/cpm/srg_page.html
  • http//www.chilbolton.rl.ac.uk/weather/raingaugede
    tails.htm
  • Weirs
  • Etc.

13
Photos Alex Cherry
Throughfall
Stemflow
14
Photo Alex Cherry
Weir at Robinson Forest
15
SURFACE WATER USE LAW
  • General Principles
  • No one owns water
  • One may own right to use water
  • Two systems in U.S.
  • East Riparian Law
  • West Doctrine of Prior Appropriation

16
SURFACE WATER USE LAW EAST
  • Riparian Law
  • Water use rights belong to owners of land
    touching lake or stream
  • Water must pass downstream unchanged in
  • Quantity
  • Quality
  • Regimen (timing)
  • Exceptions
  • Use for household, livestock garden
  • Payment of compensation

17
SURFACE WATER USE LAW WEST
  • Doctrine of Prior Appropriation
  • First claimant has first right to use
  • Earliest claims have priority if supply exceeded
  • Claims limited to beneficial use
  • Ownership of land physically touching water
    source not required
  • Water rights lost if not used

18
SURFACE WATER USE LAW
  • Watershed management is impacted by the two
    surface-water-use principles (Riparian Law,
    Doctrine of Prior Appropriation)
  • Additional laws are based on the principles
  • Regulations are based on the principles laws
  • Court decisions are based on the principles, laws
    regulations

19
WATERSHED MANAGEMENT ISSUES
  • Water yield (quantity)
  • Water regimen (timing)
  • Water quality

20
WATERSHED MANAGEMENT ISSUES (continued)
  • Water Yield Regimen
  • Managed by vegetation manipulation, e.g.
  • Forest removal
  • Decreases ET temporarily
  • Increases snowpack accumulation
  • Increases water yield (Q) temporarily
  • May expand or compress flow regimen
  • Change in species composition
  • May increase or decrease water yield
  • Water harvesting (seal soil surface)
  • E.g., to fill livestock watering ponds

21
See Fig. III-2 on p. iii-3 Greene County Soil
Water Conservation District Stream Restoration
Program. 2003. Section III Introduction to
stream management. Fig. III-2 on p. iii-3 in
Batavia Kill Stream Management Plan. http//www.g
cswcd.com/stream/bataviakill/smp/
22
WATERSHED MANAGEMENT ISSUES (continued)
  • Water Quality Issues
  • Suspended sediment
  • Dissolved nutrients
  • Chemicals
  • Nonpoint source pollution

23
WATERSHED MANAGEMENT ISSUES (continued)
  • Water Quality Issue Suspended Sediment
  • Enters streams via soil erosion
  • Reduces light penetration
  • Inhibits aquatic plant growth
  • Inhibits sight-feeding animals
  • May cause fish gill damage
  • Physical habitat damage
  • Temperature changes

24
WATERSHED MANAGEMENT ISSUES (continued)
  • Water Quality Issue Suspended Sediment
  • Seek to maintain natural equilibrium between
  • Sediments entering stream
  • Sediments transported out
  • Goal minimize sediments entering stream
  • Buffer areas between disturbance and surface
    waters
  • Appropriate timing of disturbances
  • Minimize soil compaction

25
WATERSHED MANAGEMENT ISSUES (continued)
  • Water Quality Issue Dissolved Nutrients
  • Timber harvest reduces nutrient uptake
  • Leads to increase in soil solution nutrients
  • Nutrients may increase in surface waters
  • Effect depends on ecosystem
  • Effects temporary, reforestation ameliorates
  • Uneven-aged silviculture may mitigate

26
WATERSHED MANAGEMENT ISSUES (continued)
  • Water Quality Issue Chemicals
  • Fertilizers, herbicides, pesticides
  • Need consider
  • Precipitation
  • Land surface
  • Distance from application to surface water
  • Soils

27
WATERSHED MANAGEMENT ISSUES (continued)
  • Watershed Quality Issue Nonpoint Source
    Pollution
  • Pollution with no single source identifiable
  • e.g., a forested watershed with many owners
  • Managed by land use control
  • Best Management Practices (BMPs)
  • Usually a response to a specific problem
  • Usually a combination of practices
  • Usually developed with public input
  • e.g., streamside buffers

28
Sedimentation
Debris
Photos Dr. Jeff Stringer
Streamside Management Zone (SMZ)
29
Slide courtesy Dr. Chris Barton
30
NONPOINT SOURCE POLLUTION
  • BMPs prevent or minimize problems
  • Restoration costs are VERY high
  • BMPs are preferred to restoration!

31
KENTUCKY WATERSHED VIEWER
  • http//eppcmaps.ky.gov/website/watershed/viewer.h
    tm

32
WATER YIELD CALCULATION
  • ASSUME that in a 200 ha forested watershed
  • Preharvest forest ET (annually) 70 cm
  • Postharvest ET (annually) 50 cm
  • Rainfall (annually) 80 cm
  • CALCULATE
  • 1. Pre-harvest annual streamflow volume
  • 2. Post-harvest annual streamflow volume
  • 3. Increase in streamflow volume
  • 4. Number of people supported by the increase
  • (1 ha 10,000 m2 per capita annual human water
  • consumption 212,000 liters)
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