Title: Hydrology
1Hydrology
- River Ecosystems and Humans
2Dimensions of river ecosystems
- Longitudinal
- Lateral
- Vertical
- Temporal
2
3Longitudinal Changes in Streams
- Certain characteristics of streams change
predictably from upstream to downsteam - Channels become wider
- Flow becomes slower, but greater in volume
- Streams become deeper
3
4Longitudinal Changes Reach Scale
- Longitudinal changes are also observed at shorter
scales than the entire river length - We call this shorter scale the reach scale
- One example of reach scale changes is the
pool-riffle pattern found in many streams
draining areas with medium gradient - Riffle is an area of rapid flow over coarse
substrate (rocks) whereas the pool is a slower
flowing stretch with finer substrate - Path of flow - thalweg
4
5Lateral Patterns
- There are also some predictable changes laterally
- The stream has a low flow channel the fastest
flow is called the thalweg - The stream has banks which define its frequent
flow limit - The stream has a floodplain which defines its
flow limit on less frequent events, annual or
lesser frequency
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6Lateral Patterns
- Some streams and rivers will have a single
dominant channel while others will have a network
of interwoven channels
6
7Lateral Features
- As rivers increase in size they may develop a
complex floodplain system
7
8Vertical dimensions
- Velocity changes with depth in stream channel
- Discharge (Q) VA
Diagram byEric G. Paterson Department of
Mechanical and Nuclear Engineering The
Pennsylvania State University
8
9Vertical Features
- Hyporheic (below stream) inter-actions
- Exchanges occur with groundwater just below the
stream
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10Lateral and Vertical Patterns
- In many large alluvial valleys, creatures that
live in ground water and hyporheic water can be
found in the subsurface water kilometers from the
stream. In other words the stream extends well
beyond its channel.
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11Temporal dimension
- Stream flow changes
- Second by second
- Hourly
- Daily
- Monthly
- Seasonally
- Annually
- Milleniumly
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12Selected Important Habitat Factors
- Substrate
- Temperature
- Oxygen levels
- Flow velocity
- Food availability
- pH
- Nutrient and sediment regimes
- Organic input and transport
12
13How are species distributed in space and time?
-- Environments contributing to riverine
biodiversity
Surface water
Subsurface water
Riparian system
Springs
Confined Reaches
Unconfined Reaches
Streams
Lakes
Hyporheic Zone
Ground Water
13
14Spatial distribution of species across a
floodplain (lateral dimension)
Species Richness
100
Eg. Fish Snails, slugs, mussels, Dragonflies,
damselflies Frogs, salamanders, toads Aquatic
plants
0
River ------------------------------------------
---? Floodplain Edge
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(Ward and Tockner 2001 fig. 9.3)
15How do humans affect watersheds and the
hydrologic cycle?
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16Human caused disturbances
- Agriculture
- Timber harvest
- Mining
- Urbanization
- Introduction of exotic species
- Harvesting of fish and wildlife
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17Landscape controls
Land use/cover and vegetation
Physiography
Climate
Gross reach morphology
Habitat Forming Processes
Solar energy and Organic input Regime
Nutrient Inputs
Sediment and Hydrologic Regime
Stream Morphology and Conditions
Habitat complexes and conditions e.g., pools,
riffles, temperature, etc.
Biodiversity
Species assemblages
17
Modified from Roni et al. 2002.
18Physical, chemical, and biological components
related to water quality
- Light
- Temperature
- Dissolved ions
- Suspended solids
- Nutrients and gases
- Toxics such as metals and pesticides/herbicides
- Biological features
- PPCPs (Pharmaceuticals Personal Care Products)
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19Photos by R.S. Lindsay
Agriculture
19
Photo by Carrie Inman
20FORESTRY
20
21Aggregate Mining
In-channel and floodplain mining
Photos by M. Kondolf
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22URBANIZATION
22
23Forestry, agriculture and urbanization
- Remove trees and other vegetation
- Reduce organic matter delivery
- Build roads
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24Precipitation
Natural
Developed
Rapid flow limited storage
Slow flow
Pollutant wash off
Natural cleaning
Large storage in soil, channel and valley floor
Reduced soil storage Limited infiltration
No recharge
Recharge
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25Floods and Urbanization
surface runoff vs. infiltration natural land
cover vs. urban area
25
26How do we manage watershed?
- Dept of Natural Resources Regulations
- U.S. Forest Service Regulations
- Clean water act
- Endangered Species Act
- Total Maximum Daily Loads (TMDLs)
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30Take Home Messages
- Understand the interactions between land use/land
cover and components of the hydrologic cycle - Be able to describe what is typically measured in
watersheds and why
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31Hydrology Report 2-3 pages due May 25
individually Include Name, Date, Title
Introduction Methods Results and Discussion (w
tables) Conclusions Appendix (if needed for raw
calculations)
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