The Importance of Interflow to Groundwater Recharge in a Snowmelt-Dominated Headwater Basin
Kenneth H. Williams, Rina Schumer, Richard Niswonger, Jeffrey S. Deems, Rosemary W.H. Carroll | May 23rd, 2019
Understanding the sensitivity of groundwater generation to climate in a mountain system is complicated by the tight coupling of snow dynamics to vegetation and topography. To address these feedbacks, we combine LiDAR-derived snow observations with an integrated hydrologic model to quantify spatially and temporally distributed water fluxes across varying climate conditions in a Colorado River headwater basin. Results indicate annual groundwater flow is an important and stable source of stream water. However, interflow decreases during drought as a function increased plant water use and the relative fraction of groundwater to streams increases. Seasonal snowmelt and vegetation water use regulate small recharge rates in the lower portions of the basin, but snowmelt transported via interflow from high mountain ridges toward convergent topographic zones define preferential recharge in the upper subalpine. Recharge in this zone appears decoupled from annual climate variability and resilient to drought.
Keywords
Groundwater Exchange, groundwater-surface water interaction, interbasin flow, upper watershed management