日本地球惑星科学連合2014年大会

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インターナショナルセッション(口頭発表)

セッション記号 A (大気海洋・環境科学) » A-HW 水文・陸水・地下水学・水環境

[A-HW07_29PM1] Insight into change and evolution in hydrology

2014年4月29日(火) 14:15 〜 16:00 511 (5F)

コンビーナ:*谷 誠(京都大学大学院農学研究科地域環境科学専攻)、松四 雄騎(京都大学防災研究所 地盤災害研究部門 山地災害環境分野)、野口 正二(森林総合研究所)、中北 英一(京都大学防災研究所)、座長:松四 雄騎(京都大学防災研究所 地盤災害研究部門 山地災害環境分野)、内田 太郎(国土技術政策総合研究所)

15:00 〜 15:24

[AHW07-16] Hydrological change at the catchment scale: The need to address both velocity and celerity

*MCDONNELL Jeffrey1 (1.Global Institute for Water Security, University of Saskatchewan CANADA)

キーワード:Hillslope, Rainfall-runoff, Stable isotope, Climate change, Landuse, Groundwater

Water quantity and quality response to climate- and land use change are difficult to predict. Much of this relates to the complexities of water flow paths and our inability to relate measureable catchment properties to measureable hydrologic response metrics. To date, most work has focused on rainfall-runoff response—that is, the celerity component of change. Here I present new work from 15 headwater catchments, (0.1 to 100 km2) in the Oregon Cascades and Oregon Coast Range in the USA, aimed at quantifying both celerity and flow velocities (i.e. particle transport through the system). I illustrate this velocity component through stable isotope analysis of runoff components and the mean transit time and residence time analysis of surface water and groundwater, respectively. Results show that despite very similar rainfall-runoff determined celerities, these systems have distinctly different tracer velocities, where transit time of headwater streamflow is 1-3 years in the catchments draining the Western Cascade mountains and 3-11 years in the streams draining the Coast Range mountains. More importantly, the scaling of surface water mean residence time in the Cascades is linked to internal topographic structure of individual sub-catchments whereas Coast Range sites show no evidence of this; and streamwater residence times scale linearly with catchment area. I discuss the implications of these celerity-velocity differences for catchment-scale climate- and landuse change effects in the USA Pacific Northwest and for more general efforts like the IAHS Panta Rhei initiative.