scholarly journals Alpine Stream Temperature Response to Storm Events

2007 ◽  
Vol 8 (4) ◽  
pp. 952-967 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lee E. Brown ◽  
David M. Hannah

Abstract Despite continued interest in meteorological influences on the thermal variability of river systems, there are few detailed studies of stream temperature dynamics during storm events. This paper reports high-resolution (15 min) water column and streambed temperature data for storm events of contrasting magnitude, duration, and intensity for three streams (draining glacier, snow, and groundwater sources) across an alpine river system during summers 2002 and 2003. The results demonstrate clear spatial and temporal differences in water column and streambed thermal responses to precipitation events and streamflow peaks. Analysis of all storms across the three sites showed a decrease in water column temperature for 75% of events, with significant negative relationships between stream temperature and precipitation magnitude, precipitation intensity, and stream discharge peaks. Temperature decreases of 10.4°C were recorded, but temperature increases were less marked at up to 2.3°C. Temperature response to precipitation was dampened with increasing depth into the streambed at all sites. Spatial and temporal differences in thermal response to storm events were controlled by precipitation and stream discharge peak characteristics (above) plus antecedent basin conditions, which together determine the nature and rapidity of hydrological response. In this steep alpine basin, stream temperature variability appears to be enhanced by quick routing of precipitation to the river channel (i.e., direct precipitation/channel interception, rapid surface flow over impermeable bedrock/thin alpine soils, and subsurface flow through highly weathered scree slopes). This research highlights the need for integrated hydrometeorological research of precipitation event–hydrological response–stream temperature interactions to advance understanding of runoff generation processes driving event-scale thermal dynamics in alpine and other river systems.

2013 ◽  
Vol 43 (11) ◽  
pp. 993-1005 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elizabeth Cole ◽  
Michael Newton

Determining the effectiveness of different riparian buffers for mitigating forest-harvesting impacts on stream temperatures continues to be of interest throughout the world. Four small, low or medium elevation streams in managed western Oregon forests were studied to determine how the arrangement and amount of streamside retention strips (buffers) in clear-cut units influenced stream temperatures. Buffers included (i) no tree, (ii) predominantly sun-sided 12 m wide partial, and (iii) two-sided (Best Management Practice, (BMP)) 15–30 m wide buffers. Harvested units alternated with uncut units along 1800–2600 m study reaches. Impacts of harvesting on stream temperatures were determined by time series comparisons of postharvest and preharvest regressions. Trends for daily maximum and mean stream temperature significantly increased after harvest in no tree buffer units. Partial buffers led to slight (<2 °C) or no increased warming. BMP units led to significantly increased warming, slight, or no increased warming. Temperature responses in uncut units appeared to be linked to responses in upstream harvested units. In many instances, when harvested units exhibited significantly higher postharvest trends, lower trends were observed in the uncut units downstream. Stream temperature trends of 7 day moving maxima indicated warming through the no tree buffer units and some of the BMP units. Peaks in maxima were not maintained in downstream units. Stream temperature responses were related to buffer implementation and stream features, relating to cooling and warming.


2014 ◽  
Vol 31 (8) ◽  
pp. 975-992 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Matheswaran ◽  
M. Blemmer ◽  
P. Thorn ◽  
D. Rosbjerg ◽  
E. Boegh

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Areti Gianni ◽  
Ierotheos Zacharias

Abstract. This study focuses on the role of the meromictic anoxic basins' internal load: (a) during storm events and (b) under the environments' typical stratification conditions. Measurements of physicochemical parameters, nutrients, chlorophyll and hydrogen sulfide, four days after an anoxic crisis in Aitoliko basin as well as data obtained from a biennial basin's monitoring, were used. The relationships between temporal nutrient variations in the surface layer of an anoxic basin with the changes on its water column physicochemical characteristics, the changes on the bottom water phosphorus and nitrogen concentration and their effect on the basin's primary productivity, were studied. In coastal environments, storm events could result in water column total mixing. This disturbance affects almost all the ecosystem's physical, chemical and biological parameters. The basin becomes anoxic, massive fish kills occur and H2S, PO43− and NH4+ release from bottom waters to the interface and surface waters promoting algal blooms. Bottom layer can supply the surface waters with nutrients, even during periods of high water column stratification. Small scale, usually subtle, changes in physicochemical and hydrological basin's characteristics promote this supply, affecting the ecosystem's primary production and shifting its quality character.


2014 ◽  
Vol 11 (6) ◽  
pp. 6441-6472 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Garner ◽  
I. A. Malcolm ◽  
J. P. Sadler ◽  
D. M. Hannah

Abstract. Previous studies have suggested that shading by riparian vegetation may reduce maximum water temperature and provide refugia for temperature sensitive aquatic organisms. Longitudinal cooling gradients have been observed during the daytime for stream reaches shaded by coniferous trees downstream of clear cuts, or deciduous woodland downstream of open moorland. However, little is known about the energy exchange processes that drive such gradients, especially in semi-natural woodland contexts, and in the absence of potentially confounding cool groundwater inflows. To address this gap, this study quantified and modelled variability in stream temperature and heat fluxes along an upland reach of the Girnock Burn (a tributary of the Aberdeenshire Dee, Scotland) where riparian landuse transitions from open moorland to semi-natural forest. Observations were made along a 1050 m reach using a spatially-distributed network of ten water temperature micro-loggers, three automatic weather stations and >200 hemispherical photographs, which were used to estimate incoming solar radiation. These data parameterised a high-resolution energy flux model, incorporating flow-routing, which predicted spatio-temporal variability in stream temperature. Variability in stream temperature was controlled largely by energy fluxes at the water column–atmosphere interface. Predominantly net energy gains occurred along the reach during daylight hours, and heat exchange across the bed-water column interface accounted for <1% of the net energy budget. For periods when daytime net radiation gains were high (under clear skies), differences between water temperature observations decreased in the streamwise direction; a maximum difference of 2.5 °C was observed between the upstream reach boundary and 1050 m downstream. Furthermore, daily maximum water temperature at 1050 m downstream was ≤1°C cooler than at the upstream reach boundary and lagged the occurrence of daily maximum water temperature upstream by >1h. Temperature gradients were not generated by cooling of stream water, but rather by a combination of reduced rates of heating in the woodland reach and advection of cooler (overnight and early morning) water from the upstream moorland catchment. Longitudinal thermal gradients were indistinct at night and on days when net radiation gains were low (under over-cast skies), thus when changes in net energy gains or losses did not vary significantly in space and time, and heat advected into the reach was reasonably consistent. The findings of the study and the modelling approach employed are useful tools for assessing optimal planting strategies for mitigating against ecologically damaging stream temperature maxima.


Hydrobiologia ◽  
1989 ◽  
Vol 179 (2) ◽  
pp. 97-102 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wayne F. McDiffett ◽  
Andrew W. Beidler ◽  
Thomas F. Dominick ◽  
Kenneth D. McCrea

2006 ◽  
Vol 325 (1-4) ◽  
pp. 1-20 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lee E. Brown ◽  
David M. Hannah ◽  
Alexander M. Milner

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document