4.6 Article

The filtering capacity of a tropical riverine wetland: I. Water balance

期刊

HYDROLOGICAL PROCESSES
卷 26, 期 1, 页码 40-52

出版社

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1002/hyp.8108

关键词

wetland; water balance; tropical; hydrology

资金

  1. Healthy Water Ecosystems theme of CSIRO Water for a Healthy Country

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Wetlands in the coastal catchments adjacent to the Great Barrier Reef lagoon play an important role in local hydrological processes and provide important ecological habitats for terrestrial and aquatic species. Although many wetlands have been removed or degraded by agricultural expansion, there is now great interest in their protection and restoration as important aquatic ecosystems and potential filters of pollutant runoff. However, the filtering capacity of tropical wetlands is largely unknown, so the current study was established to quantify the water, sediment and nutrient balance of a natural riverine wetland in tropical north Queensland. Surface and groundwater fluxes of water, sediment and nutrients into and out of the wetland were monitored for a 3-year period. This paper focuses on the water balance of this natural wetland and a companion paper presents its sediment and nutrient balance and estimates of water quality filtering. Wetland inflows and outflows were dominated by surface flows which varied by 3-4 orders of magnitude through the course of the year, with 90% of the annual flow occurring during the period January to March. Although groundwater inputs to the wetland were only 5% of the annual water balance, they are very important to sustaining the wetland during the dry season, when they can be the largest input of water (up to 90%). Water retention times in this type of wetland are very short, particularly when most of the flow and any associated materials are passing through it (i.e. 1-2 h), so there is little time to filter most of the annual flux of water through this wetland. Longer retention times occur at the end of the dry season (up to 8.5 days); but this is when the lowest fluxes of water pass through the wetland. Copyright (C) 2011 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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