4.6 Article

Linking physiography and evaporation using the isotopic composition of river water in 16 Canadian boreal catchments

Journal

HYDROLOGICAL PROCESSES
Volume 32, Issue 2, Pages 170-184

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/hyp.11396

Keywords

boreal; Canada; catchment-scale modelling; evaporation; lakes; stable water isotopes; tracer-aided hydrologic model; wetlands

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council
  2. CRD from Manitoba Hydro

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Highly seasonal boreal catchments are hydrologically complex and generally data poor and, hence, are ripe for investigation using tracer-aided hydrologic models. The influence of physiography on isotopic metrics was assessed to identify the catchment characteristics dominating evaporative enrichment. A multiyear stable isotope of water dataset was collected at the outlets of 16 boreal catchments in central Canada ranging in area from 12 to 15,282km(2). Physiographic characteristics were obtained through raster analysis of freely available land cover images, stream networks, and digital elevation models. Correlation analysis indicated that as the percentage coverage of open water increased, so too did the evaporative effects observed at the catchment outlet. Correlation to wetland metrics indicated that increasing the percentage coverage of wetlands can reduce or increase evaporative effects observed, depending on the isotopic metric used and the corresponding drainage density, catchment slope, and presence of headwater lakes. The slopes of river evaporative-mixing lines appear to reflect multifaceted relationships, strongest between catchment slope, headwater lakes, and connected wetlands, whereas mean line-conditioned excess is more directly linked to physiographic variables. Hence, the slopes of river evaporative-mixing lines and mean line-conditioned excess are not interchangeable metrics of evaporative enrichment in a catchment. Relationships identified appear to be independent of catchment scale. These results suggest that adequate inclusion of the distribution of open water throughout a catchment, adequate representation of wetland processes, catchment slope, and drainage density are critical characteristics to include in tracer-aided hydrologic models in boreal environments in order to minimize structural uncertainty.

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