4.6 Article

Hydrological transit times in nested urban and agricultural watersheds in the Greater Toronto Area, Canada

Journal

HYDROLOGICAL PROCESSES
Volume 33, Issue 3, Pages 350-360

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/hyp.13328

Keywords

mean transit times; model optimization; rural watersheds; urban watersheds

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
  2. FedDev Ontario via the Southern Ontario Water Consortium

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Watershed mean transit times (MTTs) are used to characterize the hydrology of watersheds. Watershed MTTs could have important implications for water quality, as relatively long MTTs imply lengthier water retention, thereby allowing more time for pollutant transformation and more moderate release of pollutants into streams. Although estimates of MTTs are common for undisturbed watersheds, only a few studies to date have applied MTT models to urbanized watersheds. In the present study, we use delta O-18 to compare estimates of MTTs for paired suburban-industrial and agricultural watersheds in Toronto, Canada. Although differences in precipitation delta O-18 between the two watersheds were negligible, there were significant differences in stream delta O-18, suggesting differences in water transport pathways. Less damping between input precipitation delta O-18 and output stream delta O-18 in the suburban-industrial watershed indicated a larger streamflow contribution from quick-flow transport pathways. We applied three transit time models to quantify MTTs. Considering overall model fit, root mean square error, and uncertainty in model parameters, the exponential model performed the best of the three models. Optimized MTTs using this distribution across the suburban-industrial subwatersheds ranged from 2.1 to 2.9 months, whereas those in the agricultural subwatersheds ranged from 2.7 to 7.5 months. The relatively small difference between urban and agricultural MTTs coincides with observations elsewhere. Model efficiencies could potentially be improved, and MTTs estimated more reliably, with a higher sampling frequency that captures a greater volume of overall discharge. Overall, this work provides a distinct first glimpse into the separation of MTTs between paired watersheds with such a large contrast in their land use.

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