seasonal and elevational variation of surface water 18 o and 2 h in the willamette river basin j....

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Seasonal and elevational variation of surface water d18O and d2H in

the Willamette River basin

J. Renée Brooks1, Parker J. Wigington1, Jr., Carol Kendall2, Rob Coulombe3, and Randy Comeleo1

1Western Ecology Division, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency2U.S. Geological Survey, Menlo Park CA.

3Dynamac Corporation,

Project Goals

Part of a larger EPA project to determine biological, physical and chemical linkages between non-navigable headwater streams and wetlands to the nation’s navigable waters.

Isotopes could be a useful for tracing these linkages.

Specific Objectives

Charactize spatial and temporal variation of d18O and d2H in small watershed streams within the Willamette Valley.

Determine the major drivers of variation.

Use the variation as a tool for understanding navigable river dynamics and linkages to small streams.

Water isotopes are partitioned by hydrologic fluxes

Water isotopes change with phase changes:

Vapor ↔ Liquid (precipitation and evaporation)

Liquid ↔ solid (freezing and thawing)

Solid ↔ Vapor (snow and sublimation)

Variance in Precipitation

18O (‰)

-16 -12 -8 -4 0 4

D (‰)

-120

-100

-80

-60

-40

-20

0

20

40

GMWL D = 8 18O +10

1

3

2

1

2

3

Precipitation

Cloud Vapor Tempera

ture effe

ct

Rain out effect

d2H

Evaporation

18O (‰)

-16 -12 -8 -4 0 4

D (‰)

-120

-100

-80

-60

-40

-20

0

20

40

Slope depends

on RH

GMWL

Evaporation line (RH<100%)

Water Vapor

Remaining liquid water

Precipitation input (temperature & rainout dependent)

RH=100%

d2H

Study Site

Willamette River Basin, Oregon.

Bordered by Coastal Range

(West) Cascade Range

(East) Elevation gain

most on East border.

AnnualPrecipitation

Patterns

Storm Trajegory

Mediterranean Climate Warm dry

summers Cold wet winters 95% of rain falls

between Oct - May

1 m

4 m

Study Design

Southern Willamette Focus

Willamette River Samples at each river confluence

6 Major Tributary Middle Fork Willamette

River McKenzie River Calapooia River North Santiam River Luckiamute River Marys River

Samples are collected quarterly

Summer low flow (September)

Fall wet up (November)

Winter rains (February)

Spring snowmelt (May)

Temporally Intensive sampling

East-West Transect 3 Rivers:

Calapooia River North Santiam River Luckiamute River

Additional samples are collected in between the quarterly samples

RESULTSCharacterizing variation of the Small Elevational Watersheds

Isotopes in Corvallis Precipitation

WY2003 WY2004 WY2005 WY2006 WY2007 WY2008 WY2009 WY2010

18 O

(‰

)

-14

-12

-10

-8

-6

-4

-2

0

Mean Watershed Elevation (m)

0 200 400 600 800 1000 1200 1400 1600 1800

2H

(‰

)

-90

-80

-70

-60

-40

18O

(‰

)

-12

-10

-8

-50

Small Elevation Watersheds

Small Watershed Elevation Gradient

d2H = -54.7 – 0.0212(Elevation)

d18O = -7.83 – 0.00304(Elevation)

North Santiam River

Mary's River

Mean Watershed Elevation (m)

0 200 400 600 800 1000 1200 1400 1600 1800

-12

-10

-8

-6 McKenzie River

200 400 600 800 1000 1200 1400 1600 1800

Luckiamute River

18O

(‰

) -12

-10

-8

-6

Coast Range Drainages Cascade Drainages

Rainout vs Elevation

Storm TrajectoryStorm Trajectory

Evaporation Effects

18O (‰)

-12 -10 -8 -6 -4

2H

(‰

)

-90

-80

-70

-60

-50

-40

Small Watershed Seasonal Pattern

McKenzie River

Oct

08

Fe

b 0

9

Jun

09

Oct

09

Fe

b 1

0

Jun

10

Oct

10

North Santiam River

Calapooia River

Oct

08

Fe

b 0

9

Jun

09

Oct

09

Fe

b 1

0

Jun

10

Oct

10

2H

(‰

)

-90

-80

-70

-60

-50

Luckiamute River

-90

-80

-70

-60

-50

High Elev

Low Elev

d2H d18OVariable R2

adj F Variable R2adj F

WS Elevation

79.0% 2108 WS Elevation

70.5% 1339

+ Long 81.3% 1218 + Evap 87.3% 1935

+ Evap 84.1% 986 + Long 89.5% 1595

+WS Slope 85.5% 827 +WS Slope 90.5% 1330

Small WatershedBest Subset Regression Analysis

*Variables tried in model for small elevational watersheds: WS Area, WS Elevation, WS Gradient, Flowpath Length, Topographic Index,Mean WS Slope, Evap, Latitude, Longitude, Season and Water Temperature.

Isoscapesbased on small watershed elevation

d18O d2H

Small Watershed Elevation Gradient

Mean Watershed Elevation (m)

0 200 400 600 800 1000 1200 1400 1600 1800

2H

(‰

)

-90

-80

-70

-60

-40Small Watersheds

R2adj = 79%

Mean Watershed Elevation (m)

0 200 400 600 800 1000 1200 1400 1600 1800

2H

(‰

)

-90

-80

-70

-60

-40Small WatershedsMajor Tributaries

Mean Watershed Elevation (m)

0 200 400 600 800 1000 1200 1400 1600 1800

2H

(‰

)

-90

-80

-70

-60

-40Small WatershedsMajor TributariesWillamette River

Seasonal PatternsWillamette River

Sep 08 Dec 08 Mar 09 Jun 09 Sep 09 Dec 09 Mar 10 Jun 10 Sep 10 Dec 10

2H

(‰

)

-84

-82

-80

-78

-76

-74

-72

-70

-68

Seasonal Changes in Source Water

Loc Fall Winter Spring Summer

Will-1 d2H (‰) -73.0 -70.5 -73.1 -79.2

668 Elev (m) 857 735 858 1,152Will-6 d2H (‰) -78.4 -76.6 -75.7 -82.0876 Elev (m) 1,114 1,026 986 1,286

d2H = -54.7 – 0.0212(Elevation)

Simple Willamette Mixing Model

Average Valley d2H = -62.0 (<800 m) Average Mountain d2H = -79.3 (>800 m)

Winter

Summer

49% 51%+

99% 1%+

Simple Willamette Mixing Model

Willamette River

Oct 08 Feb 09 Jun 09 Oct 09 Feb 10 Jun 10 Oct 10

Mea

n M

on

thly

Flo

w (

m3 s-1

)

0

200

400

600

800

1000

1200

1400

1600

1800

Valley WaterMountain Water

Summary Variation in small watershed streams:

Elevation effect caused by rainout of precipitation

No seasonal variation in small streams Minor evaporation effects

Willamette River and Large Tributaries Water sources skewed to higher elevation Water sources shift seasonally

Increasing 400 m during the summer low flows

Willamette summer low flows are highly dependent on mountain water

Useful tool for characterizing linkages between water bodies.

Continue monitoring Willamette River water isotopes.

How do Willamette water sources change with climate?

What is the impact of changing snowpack?

Elevation pattern specific to West Coast

Characterization technique can be used in many locations.

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