Objective: Have a working knowledge of the relationship between the vegetative cover in a watershed and water yield and water quality.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Essential Question: What is the water cycle and how does it influence living things? Warm-up: How does the majority of water get into the atmosphere?
Advertisements

Watersheds and the Hydrologic Cycle
Management for Water Yield Basic treatments –Removal of woody vegetation –Weather modification –Construction of “catchments”
Watershed Hydrology, a Hawaiian Prospective: Evapotranspiration Ali Fares, PhD Evaluation of Natural Resource Management, NREM 600 UHM-CTAHR-NREM.
Warm – Up 9/9 What are the four conditions that influence the amount of runoff an area would have? Get out your surface water notes from Friday to prepare.
Alabama Best Management Practices for Forestry Alabama’s Best Management Practices for Forestry “… are voluntary guidelines to help maintain and protect.
MARMOT CREEK RESEARCH BASIN WORKSHOP BARRIER LAKE FIELD STATION FEBRUARY 2013.
Erosion. What is it?  Movement of soil materials by the action of water, wind or gravity.
Cycles of Matter Unlike the one-way flow of energy,
Runoff Processes Daene C. McKinney
Basic Concepts Watersheds Quiz I-2 View this quiz as a slide show from “the beginning” During the slide show, you can right click on any slide and choose.
OKLAHOMA STATE UNIVERSITY Biosystems and Agricultural Engineering Department Hydrology 101 OKLAHOMA STATE UNIVERSITY Biosystems and Agricultural Engineering.
Water Pollution. Watershed A watershed is an area of land from which all the water drains to the same location, such as a stream, pond, lake, river, wetland.
Hydrologic Abstractions
Lecture ERS 482/682 (Fall 2002) Interception ERS 482/682 Small Watershed Hydrology.
Material cycles and flows. Decomposition.
Logging and Water Yield Kim Raby GEOG Denver Post, 11/10/02 Coon Creek, WY 4,100 acre demonstration project illustrates patch cuts in lodgepole.
Forest Watershed Management Course Objective: Understand the purposes and procedures of watershed management, the impact of forest management activities.
Engineering Hydrology (ECIV 4323)
Urban Hydrology and Water Budget Calculation Geog310 Urban Climatology.
What Do You See? Message of the Day: The management objective determines whether a site is over, under, or fully stocked.
ERS 482/682 Small Watershed Hydrology
Climatic variability, land-cover change, and forest hydrology in the Pacific Northwest David W. Peterson JISAO Climate Impacts Group Forest Hydrology.
Fundamentals of River Restoration and Salmonid Fisheries OWEB, 1999, Fundamentals of River Restoration and Salmonid Fisheries OWEB, 1999, Fundamentals.
Hydrologic Issues in Mountaintop Mining Areas Ronald Evaldi, USGS-WSC, Charleston, WV Daniel Evans, USGS-WSC, Louisville, KY Hugh Bevans, USGS-WSC, Charleston,
Topic 8: Water and Climate. The Water Cycle Climate – the conditions of the atmosphere over long periods of time Water cycle – the movement and phase.
The Water Cycle May The Water Cycle There are 5 processes at work in the water cycle. Condensation Precipitation Infiltration Runoff Evapotranspiration.
Timber Harvest Influences on Hydrology and Water Quality of PNW Forested Wetlands Possibly the world’s shortest talk, if we base it on known facts. C.
Definition: Soil and water conservation engineering is the application of engineering principles to the solution of soil and water management problems.
Cycles of Matter Unlike the one-way flow of energy, matter is ______________.
Components of Healthy Ecosystems/Ecosystem Management Wally Covington.
WATER AND CLIMATE UNIT 8.
How do humans affect watersheds and the hydrologic cycle ?
Chapter 15 Issues in Water Quality. What is Water Quality? Physical –Sufficient flow to sustain fish and aquatics –Enough pools and riffles –Riparian.
CE 424 HYDROLOGY 1 Instructor: Dr. Saleh A. AlHassoun.
Effects of Teak Plantations on Water Supply at KVTC HJ van Hensbergen for Dave Scott.
Watersheds Chapter 9. Watershed All land enclosed by a continuous hydrologic drainage divide and lying upslope from a specified point on a stream All.
Coupling between fire and permafrost Effects of permafrost thaw on surface hydrology between better- drained vs. poorly- drained ecosystems Consequences.
Look at the following pictures and think about things that must be considered Pre Harvesting of Trees and Post Harvesting of Trees.
Drainage Basin. Mississippi River Basin Drainage Basin.
Fire Effects on Water. The Watershed Concept What is a watershed? Area of land that drains into a common outlet Watershed condition- health or status.
How do humans affect watersheds and the hydrologic cycle ?
October 12, 2015 Iowa State University Indrajeet Chaubey Purdue University Water Quality.
Erosion and Sedimentation Erosion – Detachment, movement and deposition of soil by water, wind, ice or gravity. Sediment – Particles derived from inorganic.
Planet Water Our Planet is covered by water, an astonishing 71 percent! If the world was uniform all the way around water would cover the planet to a.
AOM 4643 Principles and Issues in Environmental Hydrology.
My Life’s a Circle. Matter Cycles the movement of INORGANIC materials from the atmosphere or soil into living ORGANISMS and back again.
Watershed Pauline Demerjian Mariela Gonzalez Rodolfo Salgado Anthony Blanco Kevin Albanes Diana Perez.
Some Basic Hydrologic Concepts Weir are used to measure volume of water flowing past a point.
6. Drainage basins and runoff mechanisms Drainage basins Drainage basins The vegetation factor The vegetation factor Sources of runoff Sources of runoff.
Before the bell… Take out your notes sheet from yesterday.
The hydrologic cycle The story of a drop in the proverbial “bucket”
Objective: Have a working knowledge of the relationship between the vegetative cover in a watershed and water yield and water quality.
Sanitary Engineering Lecture 4
Predicting the hydrologic implications of land use change in forested catchments Dennis P. Lettenmaier Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering.
Riparian Buffers for Water Resource Protection Michael R. Burchell II Associate Professor and Extension Specialist Department of Biological and Agricultural.
Definition: Soil and water conservation engineering is the application of engineering principles to the solution of soil and water management problems.
Runoff.
Fundamentals of River Restoration and Salmonid Fisheries OWEB, 1999, Fundamentals of River Restoration and Salmonid Fisheries Dylan Castle.
Hydraulic Redistribution of Soil Water in a Drained Loblolly Pine Plantation: Quantifying Patterns and Controls over Soil-to-Root and Canopy-to-Atmosphere.
CON 101 Waters Frank Smith ><<{{{(‘>
My Life’s a Circle.
Conserving freshwater aquatic ecosystems requires consideration of 1
Watershed Hydrology NREM 691 Week 3 Ali Fares, Ph.D.
Fire Effects on Water September 27, 2006.
Hydrology CIVL341.
Chapter 3.3 Cycles of matter.
Forests, water & research in the Sierra Nevada
Hydrology CIVL341 Introduction
3-3 Cycles of Matter.
Presentation transcript:

Objective: Have a working knowledge of the relationship between the vegetative cover in a watershed and water yield and water quality

Relationship of Cover Type to Stream Flow Data for eastern U.S. limited to Appalachian Highlands –Coweeta, NC –Fernow, WV –Leading Ridge, PA –Hubbard Brook, NH –Walker Branch, TN

Why would watershed research be conducted in Appalachians? Small catchments easily identified Can install weirs at catchment outlets Precipitation adequate to maintain continuous vegetative cover

Measurements of Interest Changes in vegetative cover Water volume yield over time –Before change –After change Water temperature Nutrient loss

Treatments Clearcutting –Logs not removed –Logs removed –Whole tree removed Harvest followed by deadening of all vegetation Size and distance of roads Partial cuts - strip cutting Conversion to grass with succession Conversion to Pinus, sp.

Use of Results Manage for water supply Make silvicultural prescriptions based on water and nutrient impacts Engineer drainage structure Estimate impact of road and skid trail construction

Impact of Forest Cutting Reduced transpiration Reduced interception by canopy –Catches precipitation and increases evaporation Resulting in –Increased storage –More water for remaining plants –Greater water movement within soil –Greater baseflow

Range of change in yield Increase yield by as much as 40 cm (15.7 in.) Reduce by as much as 20 cm (7.9 in.) Suppression of regenerating foliage –Increases water yield and delays return to base level Replacement by evergreen forest –Reduces yield below original base level with deciduous forest cover

First Year Increase Following Harvest Proportional to BA removed –13% threshold value Also function of energy available for evapotranspiration, (insolation index) –Slope –Aspect –Latitude

Affects relative to total removal Riparian forest buffers –May increase yield proportionally less than same size area left unharvested away from waterway Strip cutting –May increase yield proportionally less than expected because of increased water availability

Evergreen vs. Deciduous Rate of evapo- transporation about same Evergreens have longer period of evapotranspiration Interception lasts all year

Perched water tables

Perched water tables No experimental data available Increase water table, depending on topography Seep areas would remain wet longer Would be greater potential evapotranspiration because of higher water table Partial cutting would affect stream flow less than predicted by models

Other impacts Low flow rate –Should increase low flow rates at end of growing season –Less affect with shallow soils Peak flow rate –Less available storage in soil because of reduced drainage –Greater percentage of summer and fall storms appears as streamflows –Snow melt accelerated, increasing peak flow –Roads and skid trail increase peak flow

Other Impacts Soil Moisture –Issue for regeneration and wildlife cover and food –Change depends of insolation, soil properties, etc. –Potential for increase Stream temperature –Assume removal of streamside vegetation May increase maximum summer temperature by up to 4-6 degrees Riparian forest buffers eliminate this potential problem

Other Impacts Sedimentation –Eastern deciduous forest Primary sources are roads, skid trails and landings Usually small impact on stream turbidity and bed loading, but great enough for regulatory action Type of harvest has impact because of differences in road system –Western forests Additional sources are site preparation –Slash piling and burning –Solution Limit harvest in buffers Don’t drive or skid through streams

Affect on Nutrients Nutrient losses from harvesting difficult to measure –Direct measures of soil nutrients difficult –Use changes in nutrient levels in waterway as indicator Intensive whole tree harvest increase nutrient removals by factor of 2 to 4. –Affect on plant growth depends on overall nutrient level, amount of denitrification from decomposition Recharge from atmosphere and subsoil Increases not enough to cause algal bloom or other negative impacts on aquatic ecosystems –Issue is sedimentation which also carries nutrients into water

Synopsis of water related silvicultural impacts See Stone, et. al., Figure 7.