Modeling groundwater table and runoff in self-organizing hydrologically sensitive areas

Author(s):  
Naaran Brindt ◽  
Steven Pacenka ◽  
Brian K. Richards ◽  
Tammo S. Steenhuis

<p>Understanding the hydrology of hydrologically sensitive areas (or runoff source areas) is crucial for evaluating and predicting runoff and the environmental fate of applied chemicals. However, while modeling these areas, one must deal with an overwhelmingly complex, coupled nonlinear system with feedbacks that operate at multiple spatiotemporal scales. Sufficient detailed information on the physical environment that these models represent is often not available. Consequently, the simulation's results, even after extensive calibration, are often disappointing. Fortunately, self-organization of hydrological systems' makes it possible to simplify watershed models and consider the landscape functions instead of small-scale physics. These simplified (or surrogate) models provide the same or better objective results than their complex counterparts, are much less data-intensive, and can be used for engineering applications and planning purposes.</p><p>This study aims to experimentally expose the landscape hydrological self-organization of a periodically saturated variable source area with a shallow perched water table and a humid climate. The study site is a four-hectare runoff source area near Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, US. The saturated hydraulic conductivity is greater than the rainfall intensity. The area has a single outlet through a notched weir, and the only inflow is from precipitation. We analyzed observed water table heights and field outflow and found the theory behind the self-organization of runoff processes specific to that landscape type. We determined a priori the thresholds for runoff in a surrogate model using the soil moisture retention curve. </p><p>Weir measurements showed that outflow on the day following rainfall had decreased by orders of magnitude, indicating the soil water had returned to static equilibrium. Under the equilibrated state, established theory indicates that the matric potential decreases linearly with depth above the shallow groundwater. The matric potential (and thus the retention curve) determined the soil water distribution. Another property from the whole field perspective is that excess rainfall above saturation becomes runoff.</p><p>The reason for self-organization of the source area was that the soil moisture retention curve (which is similar for the whole source area) determined daily both the soil moisture content and the water table change using rainfall and evaporation as drivers. Since the source area behaved similarly, a simple surrogate water balance could predict the aggregated area's hydrological behavior. The nonlinear and small-scale physics associated with the field's complexity determined the rate that equilibrium is reached, which is always less than one day due to high macropore conductivity, greatly simplifying surrogate models that make daily predictions.</p>

2012 ◽  
Vol 2012 ◽  
pp. 1-15 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mandana Rahgozar ◽  
Nirjhar Shah ◽  
Mark Ross

Simultaneous measurements of soil moisture profiles and water table heads, along a flow path, were used to determine evapotranspiration (ET) along with other components of the water budget. The study was conducted at a small-scale (~0.8 Km2) hydrologic monitoring field site in Hillsborough County, Florida, from January 2002 to June 2004. Frequency Domain Reflectometry soil moisture probes, installed in close proximity to water table monitoring wells were used to derive changes in the soil water storage. A one-dimensional transect model was developed; changes in the soil water storage and water table observations served as input to determine all vertical and lateral boundary fluxes along the shallow water table flow plane. Two distinct land cover environments, grassland and an alluvial wetland forest, were investigated in this particular study. The analysis provided temporally variable ET estimates for the two land covers with annual totals averaging 850 mm for grassland, to 1100 mm for the alluvial wetland forest. Quantitative estimates of other components of a water budget, for example, infiltration, interception capture, total rainfall excess, and runoff were also made on a quarterly and annual basis. Novelty of this approach includes ability to resolve ET components and other water budget fluxes that provide useful parameterization and calibration potential for predictive simulation models.


2015 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 955-994
Author(s):  
D. Michot ◽  
Z. Thomas ◽  
I. Adam

Abstract. Root uptake is the most decisive key in water transfer involving soil and vegetation. It depends on water availability which can be evaluated by punctual measurements. Additionally, surface geophysical methods such as Electrical Resistivity Tomography (ERT) provide larger spatial scales. This paper focuses on investigating temporal and spatial soil moisture changes, along a toposequence crossed by a hedgerow, using ERT and punctual measurements. 10 ERT were performed over the studied period for a 28 m long transect and compared to matric potential and groundwater level measurements. Soil Volumetric Water Content (VWC) was predicted using two methods (i) from ER using Waxman and Smits model (ii) and from matric potential using experimental retention curve fitted by Van Genuchten model. Probability Density Functions (Pdfs) of our set of data show that the largest change, in mean values of ER as well as matric potential, was observed in the topsoil layer. We then analyzed the consistency between ER and punctual measurements in this layer by extracting the arrays in the junction between ER grids and punctual measurements. Pdfs of ER maps at each monitoring time (from T01 to T10) were also calculated to select the more contrasted distributions corresponding to the wettest (T06) and driest states (T10). Results of ER were consistent with matric potential measurements with two different behaviors for locations inside and outside the root zone. A strong correlation (r = 0.9) between VWC values from Waxman and Smits model and those obtained from retention curve was observed outside the root zone. The heterogeneous soil system inside the root zone shows a different pattern in this relationship. The shift in the relationship between ER and soil moisture for the locations outside and inside the root zone highlights the non-stationarity in heterogeneous soil system. Such systems were actually related to the high hedgerow root density and also to a particular topographical context (ditch and bank) which is encountered in Brittany and over north-west of Europe.


Koedoe ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 56 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert Buitenwerf ◽  
Andrew Kulmatiski ◽  
Steven I. Higgins

Soil water potential is crucial to plant transpiration and thus to carbon cycling and biosphere–atmosphere interactions, yet it is difficult to measure in the field. Volumetric and gravimetric water contents are easy and cheap to measure in the field, but can be a poor proxy of plant-available water. Soil water content can be transformed to water potential using soil moisture retention curves. We provide empirically derived soil moisture retention curves for seven soil types in the Kruger National Park, South Africa. Site-specific curves produced excellent estimates of soil water potential from soil water content values. Curves from soils derived from the same geological substrate were similar, potentially allowing for the use of one curve for basalt soils and another for granite soils. It is anticipated that this dataset will help hydrologists and ecophysiologists understand water dynamics, carbon cycling and biosphere–atmosphere interactions under current and changing climatic conditions in the region.


1971 ◽  
Vol 24 (3) ◽  
pp. 423 ◽  
Author(s):  
JR Mcwilliam ◽  
PJ Phlllips

Under special conditions where soil-moisture diffusivity and seed-soil contact are non-limiting, the osmotic and matric potentials of the substrate were found to be equivalent in their effect on the germination of seeds of ryegrass and dehulled phalaris over a range of water potentials from 0 to -15 bars. However, with intact phalaris seeds it appears that the seed coat constitutes a large resistance to the absorption of soil water, and under these conditions the equivalence between osmotic and matric potential no longer holds, and results of germination under osmotic stress must be used with caution in predicting the germination behaviour of seeds in dry soil.


1983 ◽  
Vol 63 (1) ◽  
pp. 15-26
Author(s):  
C. L. PAUL ◽  
J. DE VRIES

A mathematical-physical model developed in the Netherlands for the simulation on nonsteady flow of water in subsurface-drained soils was tested by comparing its output with data collected in spring from two farmers’ fields in the Lower Fraser Valley of British Columbia. The ultimate objective of the tests was the prediction of soil strength and trafficability. The model was found to be useful for predicting depth to the water table and, to a lesser extent, soil water matric potential in the top 15 cm in fields drained by drains spaced at 30.5 m and 15.2 m. However, there were problems in evaluating input data. One problem was that of obtaining the drainage intensity, which was found to have a great effect on model output. A solution of the modified Glover-Dumm transient-state drainage equation provided a means of obtaining the drainage intensity directly from measured water table recession. A second problem was related to the use in the model of soil water flow parameters obtained from the water flow characteristic measured on undisturbed columns in the laboratory. Key words: Drainage model, matric potential, water table depth, trafficability, drainage intensity


2013 ◽  
Vol 17 (2) ◽  
pp. 611-618 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Dagenbach ◽  
J. S. Buchner ◽  
P. Klenk ◽  
K. Roth

Abstract. We show the potential of on-ground Ground-Penetrating Radar (GPR) to identify the parameterisation of the soil water retention curve, i.e. its functional form, with a semi-quantitative analysis based on numerical simulations of the radar signal. An imbibition and drainage experiment has been conducted at the ASSESS-GPR site to establish a fluctuating water table, while an on-ground GPR antenna recorded traces over time at a fixed location. These measurements allow to identify and track the capillary fringe in the soil. The typical dynamics of soil water content with a transient water table can be deduced from the recorded radargrams. The characteristic reflections from the capillary fringes in model soils that are described by commonly used hydraulic parameterisations are investigated by numerical simulations. The parameterisations used are (i) full van Genuchten, (ii) simplified van Genuchten with m = 1 − 1/n and (iii) Brooks–Corey. All three yield characteristically different reflections, which allows the identification of an appropriate parameterisation by comparing to the measured signals. We show that for the sand used here, these signals are not consistent with the commonly used simplified van Genuchten parameterisation with m = 1 − 1/n.


Koedoe ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 56 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert Buitenwerf ◽  
Andrew Kulmatiski ◽  
Steven I. Higgins

Soil water potential is crucial to plant transpiration and thus to carbon cycling and biosphere–atmosphere interactions, yet it is difficult to measure in the field. Volumetric and gravimetric water contents are easy and cheap to measure in the field, but can be a poor proxy of plant-available water. Soil water content can be transformed to water potential using soil moisture retention curves. We provide empirically derived soil moisture retention curves for seven soil types in the Kruger National Park, South Africa. Site-specific curves produced excellent estimates of soil water potential from soil water content values. Curves from soils derived from the same geological substrate were similar, potentially allowing for the use of one curve for basalt soils and another for granite soils. It is anticipated that this dataset will help hydrologists and ecophysiologists understand water dynamics, carbon cycling and biosphere–atmosphere interactions under current and changing climatic conditions in the region.


Koedoe ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 56 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert Buitenwerf ◽  
Andrew Kulmatiski ◽  
Steven I. Higgins

Soil water potential is crucial to plant transpiration and thus to carbon cycling and biosphere–atmosphere interactions, yet it is difficult to measure in the field. Volumetric and gravimetric water contents are easy and cheap to measure in the field, but can be a poor proxy of plant-available water. Soil water content can be transformed to water potential using soil moisture retention curves. We provide empirically derived soil moisture retention curves for seven soil types in the Kruger National Park, South Africa. Site-specific curves produced excellent estimates of soil water potential from soil water content values. Curves from soils derived from the same geological substrate were similar, potentially allowing for the use of one curve for basalt soils and another for granite soils. It is anticipated that this dataset will help hydrologists and ecophysiologists understand water dynamics, carbon cycling and biosphere–atmosphere interactions under current and changing climatic conditions in the region.


Water ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (8) ◽  
pp. 1731 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michał Śpitalniak ◽  
Krzysztof Lejcuś ◽  
Jolanta Dąbrowska ◽  
Daniel Garlikowski ◽  
Adam Bogacz

Climate change induces droughts that are becoming more intensive and more frequent than ever before. Most of the available forecast tools predict a further significant increase in the risk of drought, which indicates the need to prepare solutions to mitigate its effects. Growing water scarcity is now one of the world’s leading challenges. In agriculture and environmental engineering, in order to increase soil water retention, soil additives are used. In this study, the influence of a newly developed water absorbing geocomposite (WAG) on soil water retention and soil matric potential was analyzed. WAG is a special element made from geotextile which is wrapped around a synthetic skeleton with a superabsorbent polymer placed inside. To describe WAG’s influence on soil water retention and soil matric potential, coarse sand, loamy sand, and sandy loam soils were used. WAG in the form of a mat was used in the study as a treatment. Three kinds of samples were prepared for every soil type. Control samples and samples with WAG treatment placed at depths of 10 cm and 20 cm were examined in a test container of 105 × 70 × 50 cm dimensions. The samples had been watered and drained, and afterwards, the soil surface was heated by lamps of 1100 W total power constantly for 72 h. Soil matric potential was measured by Irrometer field tensiometers at three depths. Soil moisture content was recorded at six depths: of 5, 9, 15, 19, 25, and 30 cm under the top of the soil surface with time-domain reflectometry (TDR) measurement devices. The values of soil moisture content and soil matric potential were collected in one-minute steps, and analyzed in 24-h-long time steps: 24, 48, and 72 h. The samples with the WAG treatment lost more water than the control samples. Similarly, lower soil matric potential was noted in the samples with the WAG than in the control samples. However, after taking into account the water retained in the WAG, it appeared that the samples with the WAG had more water easily available for plants than the control samples. It was found that the mechanism of a capillary barrier affected higher water loss from soil layers above those where the WAG had been placed. The obtained results of water loss depend on the soil type used in the profile.


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