Vanderhoof Melanie K, Distler Hayley E, Lang Megan W, Alexander Laurie C
U.S. Geological Survey, Geosciences and Environmental Change Science Center, P.O. Box 25046, DFC, MS980, Denver, CO 80225.
University of Maryland Department of Geographical Sciences, College Park, Maryland 20742 now affiliated with US Fish and Wildlife Service National Wetland Inventory, Falls Church, VA 22041.
Wetl Ecol Manag. 2017 Jun 8;26(1):63-86. doi: 10.1007/s11273-017-9554-y.
The dependence of downstream waters on upstream ecosystems necessitates an improved understanding of watershed-scale hydrological interactions including connections between wetlands and streams. An evaluation of such connections is challenging when, (1) accurate and complete datasets of wetland and stream locations are often not available and (2) natural variability in surface-water extent influences the frequency and duration of wetland/stream connectivity. The Upper Choptank River watershed on the Delmarva Peninsula in eastern Maryland and Delaware is dominated by a high density of small, forested wetlands. In this analysis, wetland/stream surface water connections were quantified using multiple wetland and stream datasets, including headwater streams and depressions mapped from a lidar-derived digital elevation model. Surface-water extent was mapped across the watershed for spring 2015 using Landsat-8, Radarsat-2 and Worldview-3 imagery. The frequency of wetland/stream connections increased as a more complete and accurate stream dataset was used and surface-water extent was included, in particular when the spatial resolution of the imagery was finer (i.e., <10 m). Depending on the datasets used, 12% to 60% of wetlands by count (21% to 93% of wetlands by area) experienced surface-water interactions with streams during spring 2015. This translated into a range of 50% to 94% of the watershed contributing direct surface water runoff to streamflow. This finding suggests that our interpretation of the frequency and duration of wetland/stream connections will be influenced not only by the spatial and temporal characteristics of wetlands, streams and potential flowpaths, but also by the completeness, accuracy and resolution of input datasets.
下游水域对上游生态系统的依赖使得有必要更好地理解流域尺度的水文相互作用,包括湿地与溪流之间的联系。当出现以下情况时,评估这种联系具有挑战性:(1)湿地和溪流位置的准确且完整的数据集往往难以获取;(2)地表水范围的自然变化会影响湿地/溪流连通性的频率和持续时间。马里兰州东部和特拉华州的德尔马瓦半岛上的乔普坦克河上游流域,分布着高密度的小型森林湿地。在本分析中,利用多个湿地和溪流数据集对湿地/溪流地表水联系进行了量化,这些数据集包括从激光雷达衍生的数字高程模型绘制的源头溪流和洼地。利用陆地卫星8号、雷达卫星2号和Worldview - 3卫星图像绘制了2015年春季整个流域的地表水范围。随着使用更完整、准确的溪流数据集并纳入地表水范围,湿地/溪流连通的频率增加,特别是当图像的空间分辨率更高(即<10米)时。根据所使用的数据集,按数量计算,12%至60%的湿地(按面积计算为21%至93%的湿地)在2015年春季与溪流发生了地表水相互作用。这意味着流域范围内有50%至94%的区域直接向溪流贡献地表水径流。这一发现表明,我们对湿地/溪流连通频率和持续时间的解释不仅会受到湿地、溪流和潜在水流路径的时空特征影响,还会受到输入数据集的完整性、准确性和分辨率的影响。