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Created: | Feb 18, 2023 at 10:07 p.m. | |
Last updated: | Feb 18, 2023 at 10:42 p.m. | |
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Abstract
A paired basin study in the Upper Santa Fe River watershed following forest restoration has successfully measured water budget components in a treated and an untreated (control) basin. The paired basin study was established to investigate questions that have arisen with regards to changes in water yield from forest treatments. If forest treatments, for instance, increase the water yield or increase the sustained flow in streams, this could have implications for sensitive ecosystems or downstream water users that require sustained flow. Precipitation, stream flow, soil moisture, and chloride concentrations in precipitation and stream flow were measured to quantify the water budget components. The results from eleven years of data collection and analysis show a high degree of confidence with respect to measuring the water budget components based on the mass balance of water and chloride.
The cycle of chloride entering and exiting each basin is examined over six integration periods. The total inflow of chloride from precipitation is assumed to be equal to the outflow of chloride in stream flow and recharge over each integration period. Volume-weighted chloride concentration in precipitation ranges from 0.18 to 0.24 mg/L for the six integration periods. The volume-weighted chloride concentration in stream flow for the same periods ranges from 2.2 to 3.2 mg/L in the treated basin and 0.9 to 1.4 mg/L in the control basin. The difference in chloride concentrations between the two basins was observed prior to forest treatments. Based on the ratio of chloride concentration in precipitation to the chloride concentration in stream flow, outflow of water due to evapotranspiration (ET) is estimated to be about 90 to 94% of precipitation in the treated basin and 77 to 86% in the control basin, within the same range as observed prior to forest treatments. The higher ET in the treated basin both before and after forest treatments may be due to the much greater area of western slope in the treated basin that receives warm afternoon sun and the greater area of rock cover in the control basin. Changes in the ratio of water budget components in the control as compared to the treated were the focus of this investigation. While the pre-treatment data before 2004 is limited, treatments will continue to occur in order to achieve a forest structure that is more resilient to wildfire.
Estimates of recharge, based on the chloride mass balance, range from 1.7 to 7.2% of precipitation in the treated basin and 1.1 to 13% in the control basin. While ET appears to decrease over time following forest treatments in the treated stream relative to the control basin (based on the chloride ratio), changes in stream flow and recharge are only observable during periods when winter precipitation represents a greater proportion of the annual precipitation. The relatively dry period of this eleven-year investigation may have contributed to the lack of overall discernable differences in stream flow and recharge.
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Name | Organization | Address | Phone | Author Identifiers |
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Dan Cadol | New Mexico Tech |
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This resource is shared under the Creative Commons Attribution CC BY.
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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