首页> 外文期刊>Hydrology and Earth System Sciences >The pulse of a montane ecosystem: coupling between daily cycles in solar flux, snowmelt, transpiration, groundwater, and streamflow at Sagehen Creek and Independence Creek, Sierra Nevada, USA
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The pulse of a montane ecosystem: coupling between daily cycles in solar flux, snowmelt, transpiration, groundwater, and streamflow at Sagehen Creek and Independence Creek, Sierra Nevada, USA

机译:蒙太烷生态系统的脉冲:Sagehen Creek和独立溪流的日光通量,散光,蒸腾,地下水和Sewsflow之间的日常循环之间的耦合

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Water levels in streams and aquifers often exhibit daily cycles during rainless periods, reflecting daytime extraction of shallow groundwater by evapotranspiration (ET) and, during snowmelt, daytime additions of meltwater. These cycles can aid in understanding the mechanisms that couple solar forcing of ET and snowmelt to changes in streamflow. Here we analyze 3?years of 30 min solar flux, sap flow, stream stage, and groundwater level measurements at Sagehen Creek and Independence Creek, two snow-dominated headwater catchments in California's Sierra Nevada mountains. Despite their sharply contrasting geological settings (most of the Independence basin is glacially scoured granodiorite, whereas Sagehen is underlain by hundreds of meters of volcanic and volcaniclastic deposits that host an extensive groundwater aquifer), both streams respond similarly to snowmelt and ET forcing. During snow-free summer periods, daily cycles in solar flux are tightly correlated with variations in sap flow, and with the rates of water level rise and fall in streams and riparian aquifers. During these periods, stream stages and riparian groundwater levels decline during the day and rebound at night. These cycles are reversed during snowmelt, with stream stages and riparian groundwater levels rising during the day in response to snowmelt inputs and falling at night as the riparian aquifer drains. Streamflow and groundwater maxima and minima (during snowmelt- and ET-dominated periods, respectively) lag the midday peak in solar flux by several hours. A simple conceptual model explains this lag: streamflows depend on riparian aquifer water levels, which integrate snowmelt inputs and ET losses over time, and thus will be phase-shifted relative to the peaks in snowmelt and evapotranspiration rates. Thus, although the lag between solar forcing and water level cycles is often interpreted as a travel-time lag, our analysis shows that it is mostly a dynamical phase lag, at least in small catchments. Furthermore, although daily cycles in streamflow have often been used to estimate ET fluxes, our simple conceptual model demonstrates that this is infeasible unless the response time of the riparian aquifer can be determined. As the snowmelt season progresses, snowmelt forcing of groundwater and streamflow weakens and evapotranspiration forcing strengthens. The relative dominance of snowmelt vs. ET can be quantified by the diel cycle index, which measures the correlation between the solar flux and the rate of rise or fall in streamflow or groundwater. When the snowpack melts out at an individual location, the local groundwater shifts abruptly from snowmelt-dominated cycles to ET-dominated cycles. Melt-out and the corresponding shift in the diel cycle index occur earlier at lower altitudes and on south-facing slopes, and streamflow integrates these transitions over the drainage network. Thus the diel cycle index in streamflow shifts gradually, beginning when the snowpack melts out near the gauging station and ending, months later, when the snowpack melts out at the top of the basin and the entire drainage network becomes dominated by ET cycles. During this long transition, snowmelt signals generated in the upper basin are gradually overprinted by ET signals generated lower down in the basin. The gradual springtime transition in the diel cycle index is mirrored in sequences of Landsat images showing the springtime retreat of the snowpack to higher elevations and the corresponding advance of photosynthetic activity across the basin. Trends in the catchment-averaged MODIS enhanced vegetation index (EVI2) also correlate closely with the late springtime shift from snowmelt to ET cycles and with the autumn shift back toward snowmelt cycles. Seasonal changes in streamflow cycles therefore reflect catchment-scale shifts in snowpack and vegetation activity that can be seen from Earth orbit. The data and analyses presented here illustrate how streams can act as mirrors of the landscape, integrating physical and ecohydrological signals across their contributing drainage networks.
机译:溪流和含水层中的水位通常在无雨期间显示日常循环,反映了蒸散,在融雪,白天添加熔融水中的浅层地下水的日间提取。这些循环可以帮助理解夫妇迫使ET和雪地胁迫的机制变得有助于与流流的变化进行融合。在这里,我们在Sagehen Creek和独立溪流中分析了3岁30分钟的太阳能通量,SAP流动,流阶段和地下水位测量,在加利福尼亚山脉内华达山脉的两个雪地占地面积。尽管地质环境急剧造成鲜明对比(大部分独立盆地是冰冷的精磨芽孢杆菌,而Sagehen是由数百米的火山和火山的火山沉积物下划线,举办了一个广泛的地下水含水层),这两条溪流与雪花和ET强迫相似。在无雪夏季期间,太阳能通量的日常循环与SAP流动的变化紧密相关,水位上升和河流和河流含水层的速度升高。在这些时期,流程阶段和河岸地下水位在白天下降,并在晚上反弹。这些循环在雪花期间逆转,流程阶段和河岸地下水水平在当天上升,以应对雪地含水层排出的晚上。流出和地下水最大值和最小值(分别在雪橇和ET-COMING期间)延迟了几个小时的太阳能助焊剂中的午间峰值。一个简单的概念模型解释了这一滞后:流出依赖于河流含水层水平,这随着时间的推移整合雪光输入和ET损失,因此相对于散雪和蒸散率的峰值相对于峰值相移。因此,尽管太阳迫使和水平循环之间的滞后通常被解释为旅行时间滞后,但我们的分析表明它主要是一种动态相位滞后,至少在小集水区中。此外,尽管流出的日常周期通常用于估计ET通量,但我们的简单概念模型表明这是不可行的,除非可以确定河流含水层的响应时间。随着雪花季节的进展,地下水和流出的融雪迫使削弱和蒸发抗措强迫加强。雪花与ET的相对优势可以通过Diel循环指数来量化,该指数测量太阳能通量与升高速率或落入流流或地下水之间的相关性。当积雪在个别位置熔化时,当地地下水从雪花主导的循环突然转移到ET-主导的周期。熔化和DIEL循环指数中的相应偏移在较低的海拔地区和朝南斜坡上发生,并且流出整合这些过渡通过排水网络。因此,当积雪熔化在衡量站附近并结束时,几个月后,几个月后,几个月后,几个月的循环指数逐渐转移,当积雪在盆地顶部熔化时,整个排水网络被Et循环占据主导。在这种长过渡期间,在上部盆地中产生的雪花信号逐渐叠印,在盆中较低的ET信号。 Diel循环指数中的逐渐春季运动员在山顶图像的序列中镜像,显示了积雪的春天退缩到较高的升高和盆地光合活动的相应进展。集水区均增强植被指数(EVI2)的趋势也与从雪花到ET周期的晚期春天班次密切相关,秋季转向散户周期。因此,流流星循环的季节变化反映了在地球轨道上可以看到的积雪和植被活动中的集水区偏移。这里提出的数据和分析说明了流如何充当景观的镜子,整合在其贡献的排水网络上的物理和生态学信号。

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