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Estimating Recharge on Groundwater Resources Projects The Influence of Soils & Crops Tim Hess Institute of Water & Environment Cranfield University Environment Agency Workshop - 4 th November 2004
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Potential Recharge Recharge gets what’s left …. Precipitation Interception loss Overland flow Soil Evaporation Transpir- ation Storage
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Interception loss Site % of annual rainfall Source Upland Forest25 - 49Johnson (1990) Lowland Beech14 -16Neal et al. (1993) Short Rot n Coppice21Rushton (1998) Interception loss
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With short vegetation, canopy evaporation may (partially) substitute for transpiration Source: Thompson et al., 1996 Interception loss Smaller net ‘loss’
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Spatial redistribution Estimated rainwater entering lysimeters containing 3 different sized willow plants during 3 rainfall events. Seymour, Pers. Com. Interception loss
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Soil evaporation High when wet Low when dry Time since wetting E/PE 1.0 Wet soil Energy limited Dry soil Supply limited Low in winter (PE is low) Important in spring (E soil ½ ET grass ) Low in summer (soil cover is high) Soil Evaporation
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ET and plants Kc = Potential ET / Reference ET (ETo ETref “PET” PE) Kc = f(plant type, density, height) Kc varies seasonally Transpir- ation
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Kc curve for an annual crop For most agricultural crops, 0.9 < Kc <1.2 at full cover Cover development is more important Sources: FAO56, “Crop Calendars” Transpir- ation
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Plant stress Qs < ET = stress stomata close ET < potential Occurs when ET is high (midday, summer) Qs is low (dry soil, sandy soil) ETactual depends on Weather Soil water content ET QsQs Transpir- ation
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Soil Storage Soil storage Field Capacity Permanent Wilting Point Drainage rate Rooting depth (season) Fraction that is “easily” available i.e. when ET = potential Together, these determine ……. Volume of storage Rate of depletion through ET Rate of depletion through drainage
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Issues - interception How much precipitation never reaches the ground? How does this vary seasonally? When is it important and when can we ignore it?
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Issues - ET How is Kc defined? What is the reference used (Penman, Penman-Monteith, MORECS, MOSES)? Which was used in the development of Kc? FAO 56 approach to Kc ini is not suitable for rainfed conditions when Kc = f(wetting) Is interception accounted for in the Kc? Transpir- ation
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Issues – ET continued What is the Kc to use for non-agricultural surfaces? ‘Natural’ vegetation Wetlands What about ‘edge effects’, stand size and advection? Transpir- ation
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Issues - soil What fraction of total available water is “easily” available? FAO56 “p” factor developed for monthly water balances How well do the models account for wetting on dry soils? slow release of drainage? How important is small-scale spatial variability in soil, plants and wetting patterns?
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… and finally …. Recharge = precipitation - interception loss - evaporation - surface runoff (+ runon) - actual transpiration +/- errors in all of the above!
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