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Hydrology of inland tropical lowlands : The Kapuas and Mahakam wetlands

Authors :
Hidayat, Hidayat
Teuling, Ryan
Vermeulen, Bart
Muh, Taufik
Kastner, Karl
Geertsema, Tjitske J.
Bol, Dinja C.C.
Hoekman, Dirk H.
Sri Haryani, Gadis
van Lanen, Henny A.J.
Delinom, Robert M.
Dijksma, Roel
Anshari, Gusti Z.
Ningsih, Nining S.
Uijlenhoet, Remko
Hoitink, Ton
Hidayat, Hidayat
Teuling, Ryan
Vermeulen, Bart
Muh, Taufik
Kastner, Karl
Geertsema, Tjitske J.
Bol, Dinja C.C.
Hoekman, Dirk H.
Sri Haryani, Gadis
van Lanen, Henny A.J.
Delinom, Robert M.
Dijksma, Roel
Anshari, Gusti Z.
Ningsih, Nining S.
Uijlenhoet, Remko
Hoitink, Ton
Source :
ISSN: 1027-5606
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Wetlands are important reservoirs of water, carbon and biodiversity. They are typical landscapes of lowland regions that have high potential for water retention. However, the hydrology of these wetlands in tropical regions is often studied in isolation from the processes taking place at the catchment scale. Our main objective is to study the hydrological dynamics of one of the largest tropical rainforest regions on an island using a combination of satellite remote sensing and novel observations from dedicated field campaigns. This contribution offers a comprehensive analysis of the hydrological dynamics of two neighbouring poorly gauged tropical basins; the Kapuas basin (98g700gkm2) in West Kalimantan and the Mahakam basin (77g100gkm2) in East Kalimantan, Indonesia. Both basins are characterised by vast areas of inland lowlands. Hereby, we put specific emphasis on key hydrological variables and indicators such as discharge and flood extent. The hydroclimatological data described herein were obtained during fieldwork campaigns carried out in the Kapuas over the period 2013-2015 and in the Mahakam over the period 2008-2010. Additionally, we used the Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM) rainfall estimates over the period 1998-2015 to analyse the distribution of rainfall and the influence of El-Niño - Southern Oscillation. Flood occurrence maps were obtained from the analysis of the Phase Array type L-band Synthetic Aperture Radar (PALSAR) images from 2007 to 2010. Drought events were derived from time series of simulated groundwater recharge using time series of TRMM rainfall estimates, potential evapotranspiration estimates and the threshold level approach. The Kapuas and the Mahakam lake regions are vast reservoirs of water of about 1000 and 1500gkm2 that can store as much as 3 and 6.5 billiongm3 of water, respectively. These storage capacity values can be doubled considering the area of flooding under vegetation cover. Discharge time series show that backwater

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
ISSN: 1027-5606
Notes :
application/pdf, Hydrology and Earth System Sciences 21 (2017) 5, ISSN: 1027-5606, ISSN: 1027-5606, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1200326296
Document Type :
Electronic Resource