4.5 Article

A comparison of wetness indices for the prediction of observed connected saturated areas under contrasting conditions

Journal

EARTH SURFACE PROCESSES AND LANDFORMS
Volume 39, Issue 3, Pages 399-413

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/esp.3506

Keywords

wetness indices; observed saturation areas; connectivity; stream network; data resolution

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For lack of other widely available spatial information, topography is often used to predict water fluxes and water quality in mesoscale watersheds. Such data have however proven to be misleading in many environments where large and flat valley bottoms and/or highly conducive soil covers determine water storage and water transport mechanisms. Also, the focus is generally on the prediction of saturation areas regardless of whether they are connected to the catchment hydrographic network or rather present in isolated topographic depressions. Here soil information was coupled with terrain data towards the targeted prediction of connected saturated areas. The focus was on the 30km(2) Girnock catchment (Cairngorm Mountains, northeast Scotland) and its 3km(2) sub-catchment, Bruntland Burn in which seven field surveys were done to capture actual maps of connected saturated areas in both dry and humid conditions. The 1km(2) resolution UK Hydrology of Soil Types (HOST) classification was used to extract relevant, spatially variable, soil parameters. Results show that connected saturated areas were fairly well predicted by wetness indices but only in wet conditions when they covered more than 30% of the whole catchment area. Geomorphic indices including information on terrain shape, steepness, aspect, soil texture and soil depth showed potential but generally performed poorly. Indices based on soil and topographic data did not have more predictive power than those based on topographic information only: this was attributed to the coarse resolution of the HOST classification. Nevertheless, analyses provided interesting insights into the scale-dependent water storage and transport mechanisms in both study catchments. Copyright (c) 2013 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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