Controls on streamflow intermittence in the Colorado Front Range
Abstract
Intermittent streams comprise more than 60% of the channel length in semiarid northern Colorado, yet little is known about their flow magnitude and timing. We used field surveys, stream sensors, and remote sensing to quantify spatial and temporal patterns of streamflow intermittence in the Cache la Poudre basin in 2016-2017. To evaluate potential controls on streamflow intermittence, we delineated the drainage area to each monitored point and quantified the catchment's mean precipitation, temperature, snow persistence, slope, aspect, vegetation type, soil type, and bedrock geology. During the period of study, most streams below 2500 m elevation and <550 mm mean annual precipitation were intermittent, with flow only during the early spring and summer. In these drier low elevation areas, flow duration generally increased with precipitation and snow persistence. Locally, the type of bedrock geology and location of streams relative to faults affected flow duration. Above 2500 m, nearly all streams with drainage areas >1 km2 had perennial flow, whereas nearly all streams with drainage areas <1 km2 had intermittent flow. For the high elevation intermittent streams, stream locations often differed substantially from the locations mapped in standard GIS data products. Initial analyses have identified no clearly quantifiable controls on flow duration of high elevation streams, but field observations indicate subsurface flow paths are important contributors to surface streams.
- Publication:
-
AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2017
- Bibcode:
- 2017AGUFM.H41I1564K
- Keywords:
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- 0454 Isotopic composition and chemistry;
- BIOGEOSCIENCES;
- 1804 Catchment;
- HYDROLOGY;
- 1865 Soils;
- HYDROLOGY;
- 1871 Surface water quality;
- HYDROLOGY