Abstract

Abstract. Computational experiments are performed to evaluate the effects of locally heterogeneous conductivity fields on regional exchanges of water between stream and aquifer systems in the Middle Heihe River basin (MHRB) of northwestern China. The effects are found to be nonlinear in the sense that simulated discharges from aquifers to streams are systematically lower than discharges produced by a base model parameterized with relatively coarse effective conductivity. A similar, but weaker, effect is observed for stream leakage. The study is organized around three hypotheses: (H1) small-scale spatial variations of conductivity significantly affect regional exchanges of water between streams and aquifers in river basins, (H2) aggregating small-scale heterogeneities into regional effective parameters systematically biases estimates of stream–aquifer exchanges, and (H3) the biases result from slow paths in groundwater flow that emerge due to small-scale heterogeneities. The hypotheses are evaluated by comparing stream–aquifer fluxes produced by the base model to fluxes simulated using realizations of the MHRB characterized by local (grid-scale) heterogeneity. Levels of local heterogeneity are manipulated as control variables by adjusting coefficients of variation. All models are implemented using the MODFLOW (Modular Three-dimensional Finite-difference Groundwater Flow Model) simulation environment, and the PEST (parameter estimation) tool is used to calibrate effective conductivities defined over 16 zones within the MHRB. The effective parameters are also used as expected values to develop lognormally distributed conductivity (K) fields on local grid scales. Stream–aquifer exchanges are simulated with K fields at both scales and then compared. Results show that the effects of small-scale heterogeneities significantly influence exchanges with simulations based on local-scale heterogeneities always producing discharges that are less than those produced by the base model. Although aquifer heterogeneities are uncorrelated at local scales, they appear to induce coherent slow paths in groundwater fluxes that in turn reduce aquifer–stream exchanges. Since surface water–groundwater exchanges are critical hydrologic processes in basin-scale water budgets, these results also have implications for water resources management.

Highlights

  • Exchanges of water between streams and aquifers are critical elements in the coupled dynamics of watersheds

  • This study focuses on three related hypotheses about the effects of locally variable hydraulic conductivity fields on regional exchanges of water between streams and aquifers: (H1) small-scale heterogeneities of hydraulic conductivity significantly affect simulated stream–aquifer water exchanges in river basins, and computational projections of them; (H2) systematic biases arise in estimates of exchanges if small-scale heterogeneities are smoothed by aggregation into a few sub-regions; and (H3) the biases result from slow paths in groundwater flow that emerge due to small-scale heterogeneities

  • The study addresses these hypotheses through computational experiments by simulating system states of the hydrologic systems of the Middle Heihe River basin (MHRB) of northern China

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Summary

Introduction

Exchanges of water between streams and aquifers are critical elements in the coupled dynamics of watersheds. Kurtz et al (2013) generated multiple realizations of stream–aquifer interactions in the Limmat aquifer system in Zurich Switzerland They allowed riverbed hydraulic conductivities to take one of four different levels of heterogeneity ranging from local variability at each grid point to effective conductances of only 5, 3, and 2 values. They found that effective conductance did not always reproduce fluxes obtained from base simulations where system parameters were perfectly known; simulations based on effective parameters gave biased estimates of net exchanges between aquifer and stream. It presents results comparing simulations of stream–aquifer exchanges derived from (1) a base model whose effective conductivity parameters are specified by zone and (2) stochastic realizations of heterogeneous local-scale conductivity.

Experiment setting and model development
Study area
Numerical model of stream–aquifer exchanges
Base model
Stochastic realization of conductivity fields
Tests of hypotheses
Simulated stream–aquifer exchanges
Base model calibration and simulation results
Influence of local heterogeneity on simulated results
Slow paths
Local-scale conductivity field heterogeneity
Summary and concluding remarks
Full Text
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