4.7 Article

The influence of riparian evapotranspiration on stream hydrology and nitrogen retention in a subhumid Mediterranean catchment

Journal

HYDROLOGY AND EARTH SYSTEM SCIENCES
Volume 20, Issue 9, Pages 3831-3842

Publisher

COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH
DOI: 10.5194/hess-20-3831-2016

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Spanish Government through the project MONTES-Consolider [CSD2008-00040-MONTES]
  2. Spanish Government through the project MEDFORESTREAM [CGL2011-30590]
  3. Spanish Government through the project MEDSOUL [CGL2014-59977-C3-2]
  4. Spanish Ministry of Education and Science [AP-2009-3711]
  5. MEDSOUL project
  6. Spanish Research Council [JAE-DOC027]
  7. Spanish CICT (Juan de la Cierva contract) [JCI-2008-177]
  8. European Social Funds (FSE)
  9. NICUS project [CGL-2014-55234-JIN]
  10. Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness [BES-2012-054572]

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Riparian evapotranspiration (ET) can influence stream hydrology at catchment scale by promoting the net loss of water from the stream towards the riparian zone (i.e., stream hydrological retention). However, the consequences of stream hydrological retention on nitrogen dynamics are not well understood. To fill this gap of knowledge, we investigated changes in riparian ET, stream discharge, and nutrient chemistry in two contiguous reaches (headwater and valley) with contrasted riparian forest size in a small forested Mediterranean catchment. Additionally, riparian groundwater level (h(gw))was measured at the valley reach. The temporal pattern of riparian ET was similar between reaches, and was positively correlated with h(gw) (rho = 0.60) and negatively correlated with net riparian groundwater inputs (rho < 0.55). During the vegetative period, stream hydrological retention occurred mostly at the valley reach (59% of the time), and was accompanied by in-stream nitrate release and ammonium uptake. During the dormant period, when the stream gained water from riparian groundwater, results showed small influences of riparian ET on stream hydrology and nitrogen concentrations. Despite being a small component of annual water budgets (4.5 %), our results highlight that riparian ET drives stream and groundwater hydrology in this Mediterranean catchment and, furthermore, question the potential of the riparian zone as a natural filter of nitrogen loads.

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