Abstract

Abstract. Assessment of water resources available in different storages and moving along different pathways in a catchment is important for its optimal use and protection, and also for the prediction of floods and low flows. Moreover, understanding of the runoff generation processes is essential for assessing the impacts of climate and land use changes on the hydrological response of a catchment. Many methods for base flow separation exist, but hardly one focuses on the specific behaviour of temperate lowland areas. This paper presents the results of a base flow separation study carried out in a lowland area in the Netherlands. In this study, field observations of precipitation, groundwater and surface water levels and discharges, together with tracer analysis are used to understand the runoff generation processes in the catchment. Several tracer and non-tracer based base flow separation methods were applied to the discharge time series, and their results are compared. The results show that groundwater levels react fast to precipitation events in this lowland area with shallow groundwater tables. Moreover, a good correlation was found between groundwater levels and discharges suggesting that most of the measured discharge also during floods comes from groundwater storage. It was estimated using tracer hydrological approaches that approximately 90% of the total discharge is groundwater displaced by event water mainly infiltrating in the northern part of the catchment, and only the remaining 10% is surface runoff. The impact of remote recharge causing displacement of near channel groundwater during floods could also be motivated with hydraulic approximations. The results show further that when base flow separation is meant to identify groundwater contributions to stream flow, process based methods (e.g. the rating curve method; Kliner and Knezek, 1974) are more reliable than other simple non-tracer based methods. Also, the recursive filtering method (proposed by Eckhardt, 2005) can be calibrated well using the results of tracer investigation giving good results. Consequently, non-tracer based base flow separation methods that can be validated for some events may provide a powerful tool for groundwater assessment or model calibration/validation in lowland areas.

Highlights

  • Understanding runoff generation processes, i.e. source areas, pathways and retention times, is important for the prediction of water quantities, including floods and low flows, and water quality in a catchment (e.g. Bonell, 1998; Uhlenbrook, 2006; Eckhardt, 2008)

  • The results show that groundwater levels react fast to precipitation events in this lowland area with shallow groundwater tables

  • Recharge rates where the covering layer is present are likely to be small as a result of the compact clay separating the surface from the first aquifer

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Summary

Introduction

Understanding runoff generation processes, i.e. source areas, pathways and retention times, is important for the prediction of water quantities, including floods and low flows (base flows), and water quality in a catchment (e.g. Bonell, 1998; Uhlenbrook, 2006; Eckhardt, 2008). These processes continue to be difficult to quantify and conceptualize (McDonnell and Tanaka, 2001; Uhlenbrook and Hoeg, 2003) and the direct measurement of each discharge component, in a continuous way and at a sufficient number of locations is practically impossible

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