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  4. Short-term dynamics of drainage density based on a combination of channel flow state surveys and water level measurements
 
research article

Short-term dynamics of drainage density based on a combination of channel flow state surveys and water level measurements

Bujak-Ozga, Izabela
•
van Meerveld, H. J. (Ilja)
•
Prof Rinaldo, Andrea  
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December 1, 2023
Hydrological Processes

Headwater streams often experience intermittent flow. Consequently, the flowing drainage network expands and contracts and the flowing drainage density (DD) varies over time. Monitoring the DD dynamics is essential to understand the processes controlling it. However, our knowledge of the event-scale DD dynamics is limited because high spatial and temporal resolution data on the DD remain sparse. Therefore, our team monitored the DD dynamics and hydrologic variables in two 5-ha headwater catchments in the Swiss pre-Alps in the summer of 2021, through mapping surveys of the flow state and a wireless streamwater level sensor network. We combined the two data sources to calculate the DD at the event-time scale. Our so-called CEASE method assumes that flow in a channel reach occurs above a set of water level thresholds, and it determined the DDs with accuracies >94%. DD responses to events differed for the two catchments, despite their proximity and similar size. DD ranged from 2.7 to 32.2 km km(-2) in the flatter catchment (average slope: 15(degrees)). For this catchment, the discharge-DD relationship became steeper when DD exceeded 20 km km(-2 )and DD increased substantially with relatively small increases in discharge. For rainfall events during dry conditions, the discharge-DD relationship showed counterclockwise hysteresis, likely due to initially high groundwater discharge from the area near the catchment outlet; once rainfall stopped, DD remained high during the streamflow recession due to rising groundwater levels throughout the catchment. For events during wet conditions, the discharge and DD responded synchronously. In the steeper catchment (average slope: 24(degrees)), the DD varied only from 7.8 to 14.6 km km(-2) and there was no hysteresis or threshold behaviour in the discharge-DD relationship, likely because multiple groundwater springs maintained streamflow throughout the network during the monitoring period. These results highlight the high variability in DD and its dynamics across small headwater catchments.

  • Details
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Type
research article
DOI
10.1002/hyp.15041
Web of Science ID

WOS:001130085300001

Author(s)
Bujak-Ozga, Izabela
van Meerveld, H. J. (Ilja)
Prof Rinaldo, Andrea  
Freiin von Freyberg, Jana  
Date Issued

2023-12-01

Publisher

Wiley

Published in
Hydrological Processes
Volume

37

Issue

12

Article Number

e15041

Subjects

Physical Sciences

•

Drainage Density

•

Ires

•

Non-Perennial Streams

•

Rainfall-Runoff Events

•

Stream Network

•

Temporary Streams

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
ECHO  
FunderGrant Number

Swiss National Science Foundation

PR00P2_185931

Available on Infoscience
February 20, 2024
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/204824
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