Connecting precipitation inputs and soil flow pathways to stream water in contrasting boreal catchments

Stable isotopes of water are one of the most widely used tools to track the pathways of precipitation inputs to streams. In the past, soils have often been treated as black‐boxes through which precipitation is routed to streams without much consideration of how, when, and where water is transported...

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Veröffentlicht in:Hydrological processes 2015-07, Vol.29 (16), p.3546-3555
Hauptverfasser: Peralta-Tapia, A., Sponseller, R. A., Tetzlaff, D., Soulsby, C., Laudon, H.
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container_end_page 3555
container_issue 16
container_start_page 3546
container_title Hydrological processes
container_volume 29
creator Peralta-Tapia, A.
Sponseller, R. A.
Tetzlaff, D.
Soulsby, C.
Laudon, H.
description Stable isotopes of water are one of the most widely used tools to track the pathways of precipitation inputs to streams. In the past, soils have often been treated as black‐boxes through which precipitation is routed to streams without much consideration of how, when, and where water is transported along soil and groundwater flow paths. Here, we use time series of stable isotopes (18O) in precipitation, soil/groundwater, and stream water to evaluate how landscape structure and heterogeneity influence seasonal hydrological patterns characteristic of boreal headwater catchments. To do this, we collected water throughout a full year at three adjacent catchments draining forest, mire, and mire/lake ecosystems within the Krycklan Experimental Catchment of northern Sweden. Isotope time series from forest and mire groundwater piezometers showed spatial and temporal heterogeneity in the dominant hydrologic flow pathways connecting precipitation to stream flow at different sites. The isotopic signature of stream water suggested strong connections to the dominant landscape elements within each catchment. These connections translated into greater temporal variability in the isotopic response of streams draining lake and wetland patches, and a much more attenuated pattern in the forest‐dominated catchment. Overall, seasonal changes in the isotopic composition of streams and groundwater illustrate how differences in landscape structure result in variable hydrological patterns in the boreal landscape. Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
doi_str_mv 10.1002/hyp.10300
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source Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete
subjects boreal forest
Catchments
Forest Science
Groundwater
Hydrology
Isotopes
Landscapes
mire
Nordic catchments
Precipitation
Skogsvetenskap
Soil (material)
stable isotopes
Streams
title Connecting precipitation inputs and soil flow pathways to stream water in contrasting boreal catchments
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