H51J-1522
Modeling Hydrologic Transport through the Critical Zone: Lessons from Catchment-Scale and Lysimeter Studies

Friday, 18 December 2015
Poster Hall (Moscone South)
Paolo Benettin1, Pierre Queloz1, Scott W Bailey2, Kevin J McGuire3, Andrea Rinaldo1 and Gianluca Botter4, (1)Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland, (2)US Forest Service Durham, Durham, NH, United States, (3)Virginia Tech-Natural Resource, Forest Resources and Environmental Conservation, Blacksburg, VA, United States, (4)University of Padua, Padua, Italy
Abstract:
Water age distributions can be used to address a number of environmental challenges, such as modeling the dynamics of river water quality, quantifying the interactions between shallow and deep flow systems and understanding nutrient loading persistence. Moreover, as the travel time of a water particle is the time available for biogeochemical reactions, it can be explicitly used to predict the concentration of non-conservative solutes, as e.g. those derived by mineral weathering. In recent years, many studies acknowledged the dynamic nature of streamflow age and linked it to observed variations in stream water quality. In this new framework, water stored within a catchment can be seen as a pool that is selectively “sampled” by streams and vegetation, determining the chemical composition of discharge and evapotranspiration. We present results from a controlled lysimeter experiment and real-world catchments, where the theoretical framework has been used to reproduce water quality datasets including conservative tracers (e.g. chloride and water stable isotopes) and weathering-derived solutes (like silicon and sodium). The approach proves useful to estimate the catchment water storage involved in solute mixing and sheds light on how solutes and water of different ages are selectively removed by vegetation and soil drainage.