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Taking heat (downstream): Simulating groundwater and thermal equilibrium controls on annual paired air–water temperature signal transport in headwater streams.

Authors :
Johnson, Zachary C.
Briggs, Martin A.
Snyder, Craig D.
Johnson, Brittany G.
Hitt, Nathaniel P.
Source :
Journal of Hydrology. Jul2024, Vol. 638, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

[Display omitted] • Models consider groundwater (GW) inflow, conduction, shading, and other heat fluxes. • Equilibrium temperature deficit concept is used as scenario comparative benchmark. • GW inflow and riparian shading most strongly drive changes in temperature signals. • These scenarios support process-based interpretation of paired air–water metrics. • GW source depth and inflow magnitude affect climate change thermal resilience. Headwater stream temperature often exhibits spatial variation at the kilometer-scale, but the relative importance of the underlying hydrogeological processes and riverine perturbations remains poorly understood. In this study, we investigated the relative importance of groundwater (GW) and other processes on downstream annual stream temperature signal characteristics using deterministic heat budget model (HFLUX) scenarios within an idealized stream reach representative of mountainous forested conditions. We summarized annual stream thermal regimes from the relationship of paired sinusoidal air and water temperature signals (amplitude ratio, phase lag, and mean ratio). Results showed that downstream changes in annual temperature depended on the thermal gradient between water and the hypothetical equilibrium temperature (where all heat fluxes sum to zero). GW inflow, riparian shading, and the boundary input signal were the most significant factors affecting downstream annual water temperature signals, while flow volume and channel dimensions impacted how quickly annual temperature signals changed. Effects of GW were dominated by advective rather than conductive heat exchange processes, but conduction played a larger role when GW input was more spatially diffuse. Our results indicated several mechanisms by which local processes may affect stream thermal resilience to disturbances and can help guide management of wildfire and climate change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00221694
Volume :
638
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Hydrology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
178233114
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhydrol.2024.131391